Saturday, June 7, 2014

In Haiti, UN's Herve Ladsous Takes Canned Cholera Query from MINUSTAH FM, No Mention of Who Brought the Disease


By Matthew Russell Lee
UNITED NATIONS, June 7 -- In Haiti for three days, UN Peacekeeping chief Herve Ladsous purported to address cholera, which his Department's MINUSTAH mission introduced into the country - in an "interview" with the UN Mission's own radio station.
  But in his sojourn in Haiti, Ladsous took a canned question from the UN's own media which asked about the UN's "good works" on cholera without asking who brought it, or how the UN can speak of Rule of Law while claiming immunity. MINUSTAH FM transcript here.
  Perhaps somewhere on earth there are places where officials can outright refuse to answer critical questions and answer only scribes - but for the UN with its "we the peoples" rhetoric to sink to Ladsous' low must be opposed.
   Can a UN Under Secretary General on camera refuse to answer questions about providing military support to Army units charged with rape, and about procuring drones without required approvals, by saying “I do not respond to you”?
On May 29 in the UN Press Briefing Room, Herve Ladsous the head of UN Peacekeeping did just that, telling Inner City Press on questions of rape and drones, “You know I do not respond to you, Mister.” Video here and embedded below.
  Ladsous did it flanked by Secretary General Ban Ki-moon's spokesman Stephane Dujarric. He did it with no complaint or reaction from the similar head of the old UN Correspondents Association Pam Falk, who though arriving 15 minutes late was called on by Dujarric to lob a softball question before Inner City Press.
  Inner City Press quit UNCA and co-founded the Free UN Coalition for Access, which opposes Ladsous' picking which media to answer, and UNCA insiders for accepting this.

  Afterward on May 29 Inner City Press asked Dujarric how this was acceptable. The question about Ladsous not applying Ban's supposed Human Rights Due Diligence Policy after only two Congolese soldiers were convicted of 130 rapes in Minova in November 2012, Inner City Press has asked Dujarric for weeks. He has still provided no answer, nor on Ladsous' drone procurement.
  Dujarric pointed to a separate answer by USG Ameerah Haq, not on the rapes or drones but logistics in South Sudan. This was appreciated and may be separately reported. But Ladsous is bringing all of UN Peacekeeping down, not only other officials but the troops working in the field. We'll have more on this.