Showing posts with label MINUSTAH. Show all posts
Showing posts with label MINUSTAH. Show all posts

Wednesday, November 7, 2012

Activists oppose renewal of UN Mission in Haiti


UN_Report_bl_4.jpg
Click here to read this in full @ The Final Call:  http://www.finalcall.com/artman/publish/World_News_3/article_9325.shtml

UNITED NATIONS (FinalCall.com) - The UN Security Council created the UN Stabilization Mission in Haiti, known by its French acronym MINUSTAH, keep what was seen as a polarized Haiti from violent implosion following the ouster of democratically elected president Jean Bertrand Aristide by Western powers.

The 15-member Security Council has unanimously adopted a resolution to extend the controversial peacekeeping mission until Oct. 15, 2013, with a planned draw-down of troop strength from 7,340 to 6,270. According to UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-Moon, the key prerequisite for total withdrawal is having a 16,000 strong national police force in Haiti. The force was first authorized in 2004.
Inside the Security Council chamber during an open meeting, Haiti’s Ambassador to the United Nations Jean Wesley Cazeau said his government was pleased with the plan for “configuring” MINUSTAH.

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U.S. ambassador Susan Rice told the council the U.S. government would remain a “steadfast friend” to the Caribbean nation. However, Ambassador Rice added: “The mission must remain effective in achieving its mandate and adhere to the highest standards.”

Meanwhile, across the street from UN headquarters at 42 St. and First Ave., activists from the Haitian American Justice Coalition argued the past eight years of MINUSTAH’s mandate represented a debilitating military occupation by the UN, U.S., France and Canada.

“The highest standard would be a complete withdrawal,” said Jean Robert Lafortune, an activist with the Justice Coalition.

Click here to read this in full @ The Final Call:  http://www.finalcall.com/artman/publish/World_News_3/article_9325.shtml

Thursday, December 15, 2011

HAITI: Nigel Fisher says "we did it" about cholera, than tells the Haitians to sue the UN if they can (will never work)

CLICK HERE TO VIEW THIS STORY ON CROFSBLOGS.TYPEPAD.COM (H5N1)


Haiti: Why did Nigel Fisher say that?

Earlier today I linked to an excellent BBC News story by Mark Doyle: Haiti's cholera row with UN rumbles on. And this passage really struck me:

In the capital Port-au-Prince the UN's head of Humanitarian Affairs in Haiti, Nigel Fisher, said the response to the petition was in the hands of lawyers at the UN Secretariat in New York.
But he told me; "I think we all regret the breakout of this thing and I don't think the UN has ever denied the possibility [that it could have been at fault]."
"However I would like to know with some certainty what the source was," he added.

I admit this passage surprised me. Nigel Fisher is a very well-regarded man. He has been on the scene in Haiti sinceshortly after the earthquake.

So why would he say the UN hasn't denied the possibility of being responsible for the cholera outbreak, when the UN has indeed denied it? And by none other than Martin Nesirky, spokesperson for Ban Ki-Moon himself? Surely Mr. Fisher must have remembered that.

As early as October 27, 2010, journalist Jonathan M. Katzwas raising the question of the Nepali responsibility for cholera, and I was recollecting that Kathmandu had been dealing with a cholera outbreak in September.

By the end of October 2010 I posted a report that MINUSTAH was "probing claims" that the Nepali camp's poor sanitation was the source, and Haitians themselves were demanding the Nepalis leave the country. And that was early times, when the poor Ministry of Public Health and Population was planning on having to deal with just 200,000 cases over the next year.

Last spring, the UN's report came out, blaming a "confluence of circumstances," mostly the Haitians' unsanitary habits, for the outbreak. By now the Pan American Health Organization was in disarray and never really recovered. (See its Haiti Emergency Blog, which hasn't been updated in over a month.) And since PAHO is just the Western Hemisphere branch of the World Health Organization, the integrity of WHO itself was now compromised by events in Haiti and the UN's denial of responsibility.

Long before then, I had written in The Tyee about the UN's abject failures in Haiti. I followed it up with another article, noting that the UN was fond of saying that the source of the epidemic didn't matter as long it was fought effectively. This was a disingenuous position, and Mr. Fisher says something similar when he says he would "like to know with some certainty what the source was."

I am going on at some length, with a lot of links, to make this point: The UN is doing a terrible job in Haiti. Its servants and agencies are trying to mislead the rest of the world about what is going on in Haiti, and why. They are doing so when evidence to refute them is easily available online. And if that is the case, how can we trust the UN, or WHO, or OCHA, or UNICEF, in other public-health disasters as well?

Just today, OCHA said the UN needs US$7.7 billion to to help 51 million people in 16 countries. Why the hell should any country give the UN a dime if it won't admit when it screws up?

As the great journalist I.F. Stone famously said, "All governments lie." No doubt nongovernmental organizations bend the truth too, when they see the need.

But this is not just a question of political mendacity. This is a question of medical ethics.

CLICK HERE TO VIEW THIS STORY ON CROFSBLOGS.TYPEPAD.COM (H5N1)

Wednesday, October 5, 2011

UNDP's special advisor to Eveline Herfkens on MDGs and special advisor to Bill Clinton becomes the Prime Minister of Haiti

If you ever thought or dreamed or hoped that the corruption of United Nations, MINUSTAH and disappeared funds managed by UNDP in Haiti will ever stop, well...think again:

UNDP's Garry Conille with Bill Clinton
(will he stop UN's corruption in Haiti?)

Lawmakers in Haiti approve U.N. development expert to serve as prime minister

PORT-AU-PRINCE — Haitian lawmakers on Friday approved the nomination of a U.N. development expert to serve as prime minister, handing President Michel Martelly a tentative victory in his third attempt to install a new head of government in the earthquake-ravaged Caribbean nation.

The lower house of Parliament unanimously approved Martelly’s designation of Garry Conille, 45, a physician who had served as an aide to former U.S. president Bill Clinton in the latter’s role as special U.N. Haiti envoy.

Conille must be approved by the Senate. But his approval in the lower house followed lawmakers’ rejection of two previous nominees in June and August.

That blocked the formation of a new Haitian government for months after Martelly, a former pop star, took office with a promise to lift Haiti out of its misery and turn the poorest country in the Americas into a success story.

“I thank Parliament, particularly the lower house, for the confidence placed in me,” Conille told Reuters after the Chamber of Deputies approved his selection 89-0.

Saturday, August 20, 2011

MINUSTAH Peacekeepers Charged With Sexual Abuse in Haiti, Again – Ban Ki-moon Remains Silent, Once Again-Added COMMENTARY By Haitian-Truth

By Matthew Russell Lee @ INNER CITY PRESS

UNITED NATIONS, August 17 — In Haiti, UN peacekeepers from Uruguay are accused of having sex with children in their base, and taking nude photos of the children to show other soldiers, according to the Comité de recherches pour le développement et l’organisation de Port-salut.

These allegations, revealed by www.haitian-truth.org, were published in the Haitian press six days ago — ironically the day that Secretary General Ban Ki-moon sent a letter to the director of The Whistleblower, about sex trafficking by UN peacekeepers in Bosnia.

This was described as Ban confronting a sordid chapter of the UN’s history, but Ban has apparently not confronted alleged misdeed under his watch and responsibility. The UN in New York, in the six days after the allegations were made in Haiti, said nothing about them.

Inner City Press on August 17, the day after the UN had canceled its normal noon briefing, asked Ban’s acting deputy spokesman about the allegations against the Uruguayan UN peacekeepers in Port-Salut.

Haq said, “MINUSTAH is in fact looking into this allegation, to see if there is any credibility to it. If there are any facts… we will share them.”

While some doubt that the UN would “share facts” about wrongdoing by its peacekeepers, given for example that the UN just airbrushed out from its final report allegations of inaction by Egyptian peacekeepers in Southern Kordofan. But even if the UN did report back on the allegations in Haiti, the UN does not state what happens to individual peacekeepers, by name or even nationality. The statement “any facts… we will share them” must be seen in that light.

Footnote: Speaking of seeing, Ban’s August 11 letter says he watched The Whistleblower with his senior advisers. Meanwhile, he has received but not watched the film Killing Fields of Sri Lanka, which along with addressing rape as a tool of war critiques Ban’s UN’s performance.

It’s worth nothing that dozens of Sri Lankan soldiers were repatriated from the UN mission in Haiti charged with sexual abuse, but the UN has never reported any accountability in Sri Lanka. Ban, Haq said, is “working from his home” this week; this was offered as a reason to cancel regular noon briefings, on August 16 and prospectively August 18 and beyond. And so it goes at (Ban’s) UN

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COMMENT: HAITIAN-TRUTH.ORG

The UN has been involved in all sorts of crimes, since it was inflicted upon the Haitian people years ago. We have seen their involvement in the cocaine trade…..members of MINUSTAH have been involved in kidnapping…members of MINUSTAH have opened brothels using young Haitian boys and girls…and members of MINUSTAH have raped those who would not cooperate for a few pennies or a plate of rice and beans.

The most recent incident involves the Uruguayan detachment at Port Salut. Their conduct, if performed in the United States, would see them locked up for 10 – 20 years. Unfortunately, the poor of Haiti must tolerate the humiliations brought to them by the intellectually superior South Americans, supervised by the Korean moron Ban Ki Moon. Of course I am joking about the intellectually superior as I view a bunch of Spanish speaking peasants with assault rifles.

If they tried this in Ireland the gentle folk would cut the offenders’ balls off with bolt cutters.

We were inflicted by a team from Sri Lanka that imprisoned and sexually assaulted numbers of young women. When there were complaints, the officers and 100 men were sent home. To add insult to injury, the returning criminals were treated as heroes.

Martelly must move forward with his revival of the Forces Armees d’Haiti and take steps to eliminate the MINUSTAH from our land.

Thursday, December 2, 2010

United Nations Requests Additional Millions for Haiti Peacekeeping


By George Russell


The United Nations, which spent more than $732 million on peacekeeping efforts in earthquake-battered Haiti during its last budgetary year, wants another $864.1 million from donors to cover the cost of the peacekeeping stabilization force on the island through the end of June, 2011.

The U.S. portion of that tab would be roughly 27 percent of the total -- about $234.8 million.

One of the stated missions of the stabilization project appears to be making sure that the U.N. takes an active role in ensuring that any aid will not cause a new Haitian economy to have large disparities of wealth among the population.

Just how stable Haiti will become as a result is unclear. Currently, the island is simmering with unrest over a cholera epidemic that has left more than 1,400 dead, and which many Haitians accuse U.N. peacekeepers from Nepal of causing (the U.N. denies it). Explosive protests have erupted in more than a dozen cities and towns as a result.

Additional protests are popping up over the handling of U.N. –supervised elections that took place over the past weekend, with 12 of 18 presidential candidates originally complaining of massive fraud. Since then, two of the main objectors have recanted; preliminary official results will be declared on December 7, with a further run-off election likely.

Meantime, about 1.3 million Haitians remain homeless, and the harsh work of reconstruction is barely underway. As the U.N. itself admits in the budget proposal for the United Nations Stabilization Mission in Haiti, known by the French acronym MINUSTAH, “the challenges presented by the medium term reconstruction and normalization programs are immense.”

And how MINUSTAH handles them may become a significant issue, since its budget declares that one challenge is to coordinate aid “to ensure that it does not exacerbate the unequal distribution of wealth and opportunities that have long fueled instability in the country.”

Nor will the challenges go away soon. In the next year, officials expect that they will be able to remove less than half the homeless to more permanent quarters, and project that they will be able to clear up only about a third of the debris left by the devastating temblor.

Only now, however — 11 months after the disastrous quake — is the mammoth U.N. peacekeeping effort, which involves about 15,800 personnel, including 13,300 military and police, ramping up to full strength, with anticipated expenses to match. The latest peacekeeping tab is more than 18 percent higher than the post-earthquake peacekeeping budget that the U.N. passed last April, for the year that ended this past June 31, and about 50 per cent higher than the U.N. peacekeeping effort cost pre-quake (the U.N. has been in Haiti since 2004).

As with almost all U.N. budgets, the latest $864.1 million number is preliminary ($865.3 million was initially proposed), and a General Assembly watchdog committee that oversees U.N. finances has suggested slicing $10 million from the tab. The U.N. peacekeepers say they will be back with another set of revised figures next February.

Most of the hefty increase in costs since the last peacekeeping budget is the result of the arrival of the entire peacekeeping force, authorized to climb by more than a third in numbers in the wake of the January disaster.

But the tally also includes nearly 400 new and often very highly paid “temporary” civilian positions in the U.N. peacekeeping bureaucracy, a “surge” that is supposed to begin to subside as the Haitian government “need for direct support diminishes and reconstruction efforts wind up,” the peacekeeping budget proposal states.

As a result, the bill for “general temporary assistance” in the Haiti peacekeeping budget is suddenly spiking from about $4.7 million in 2009-2010 to more than $31.6 million in the latest estimate, a hike of $26.9 million.

The budget also notes, however, that the cost of regular, non-temporary U.N. civilian staff has dipped as a result of the “temporary” surge, by about $17.6 million, to $83.8 million. But in almost every case noted in the 110-page budget document, wherever regular staff have been replaced by “temporary” U.N. civilian officials, the newcomers are higher ranked, and consequently earn weightier salaries.

The overall result is a considerably more top-heavy civilian and military component among the peacekeepers, which the budgeters argue is needed to face an array of formidable challenges, including “maintaining stability,” building “capacity to maintain the operations of state institutions,” and — remarkably for an emergency force — coordinating aid “to ensure that it does not exacerbate the unequal distribution of wealth and opportunities that have long fueled instability in the country.”

In other words, the peacekeepers are operating not only as forces for law and order and recovery, but also as social and political engineers working alongside, and sometimes on behalf of, the decimated government of Haitian president Rene Preval, and his successor, whoever that may be, in a vast and open-ended project of nation-building and social equalization.

As the budget document puts it: “MINUSTAH is a critical actor in the consolidation of social peace, stability and the rule of law.”

Having said that, however, the budget document lays out much of that critical role for each segment of the MINUSTAH effort in nebulous terms.

CLICK HERE FOR THE FULL BUDGET PROPOSAL

For its role in aiding “democratic development and consolidation of State authority,” for example, the MINUSTAH budget declares its “expected accomplishment” to be “all-inclusive political dialogue and national reconciliation. As one indicator that it is successful, it suggests that Haiti would have “less than 65 civil unrest incidents triggered by political issues in 2010-11, compared to 78 in 2009-10 and 229 in 2008-09.”

By that standard, the mission might already be dangerously close to being a flop, as a result of the cholera demonstrations and election protests of the past few weeks.

The means the peacekeepers intend to use to meet their objectives are equally foggy. They include “four meetings per month with the President and the Prime Minister to assess progress on the government’s dialogue with political parties and civil groups”; “establishment and leadership of a mechanism to coordinate international electoral assistance”; and “public information campaigns in support of political dialogue, national reconciliation and the promotion and understanding of the mandate of MINUSTAH.”

Public information tools are supposed to include co-production of a soap-opera to be broadcast in refugee camps and elsewhere “to deliver key messages,” as well as “production and dissemination of a wide range of promotional materials, media relations and strong media engagement,” marking, among other things, “United Nations Days.” (In December, there are 11 of these celebrations, including International Volunteer Day for Economic and Social Development, Human Rights Day, and International Mountain Day.)

For the “expected accomplishment” of a “secure and stable environment in Haiti,” the indicators of achievement include an increase of more than 13,000 in joint U.N.-Haitian police patrols in refugee camps over the previous year, and an “increase in the number of gang leaders arrested by police to 26 in 2010-11,” vs. 10 in 2009-10.

Daily patrols and mentoring are intended to increase the abilities of Haitian police, but there are also 20 budgeted seminars and extensive media buys for “vulnerable groups in violence-affected areas, to promote the culture of peace and raise awareness of sexual and gender-based violence.”

On a more concrete anti-crime front, the peacekeepers intend to rebuild all four Haitian prisons devastated in the quake — whose occupants largely disappeared into the general population — and help Haiti’s parliament adopt new penal and criminal procedure codes.

The U.N.’s proliferating organization chart for Haiti also includes a bulking up of supervisors for transport, logistics, communications and procurement — not to mention social services, including improved medical care and anti-stress counseling, for the peacekeepers themselves. Large numbers of the peacekeepers also suffered through the horrors of the quake — 96 peacekeepers were among the dead — and, as the budget states, they “continue to suffer and deal with the traumatic effects of their experience.”

CLICK HERE FOR THE MINUSTAH ORGANIZATION CHART

Not to mention the hard work of coordinating the humanitarian and recovery efforts themselves, including the creation of “quick reaction” military and engineering forces to help the government clear debris, drill wells, and clear roads. The U.N. will also administer a vast array of contracts and contractors who will be hired using some of the $5 billion in relief aid that has already been pledged to Haiti. But much aid has been slow to arrive. According to the U.N.’s Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA), only $34 million of some $906 million requested this year for Haiti in an emergency appeal has been delivered.

None of the additional U.N. peacekeeping help comes cheap. The salary ranges of the new, often “temporary” U.N. workers being layered into the “large and complex” mission that MINUTAH has become are not laid out in the budget document. But salaries for lower level U.N. professionals (Grade P-2) range from $61,919 annually to $81,568, depending on years of experience, while much higher ranked Directors (Grade D-2) make between $149,903 and $166,475.

Those numbers, however, greatly understate the benefits and pay of U.N. professionals. For starters, all their salaries are tax-free. They are additionally augmented with cost of living allowances (around 45 percent (CK) in the case of Haiti), hazard pay (around $17,000 for Grade D-2 in Haiti), transfer and housing allowances and other perks that add greatly to the “temporary” bill.

CLICK HERE FOR A U.N. SALARY AND BENEFITS GUIDE

On the other hand, quite a few of the new hires are not located in Haiti at all, but in the neighboring Dominican Republic, to “reduce the exposure of United Nations personnel and property to potential disasters, such as earthquakes and hurricanes, as well as criminality and riots,” the budget document declares.

Among other things, the peacekeepers have located the vast bulk of their air supply efforts at Santo Domingo’s international airport, rather than Haiti’s international airfield in the capital of Port au Prince — where about 200 U.N. personnel are also located in a Santo Domingo Liaison and Support Center.

However safe they may be as a result, the U.N. peacekeepers are thereby undoubtedly providing a considerable economic boom to the Dominican Republic rather than Haiti — even though the U.N. budgeters argue that along with safety concerns, the civilian presence is also cheaper as a result, as the Santo Domingo staff do not qualify for the hefty U.N. hazard pay allowances that go with the Haiti assignment.

With or without hazard pay, the budget document declares that the expansion of MINUSTAH itself is one of the main reasons behind the “exponential” increase in the “complexity of the operating environment” in which its own services must be delivered. That workload, the budget declares, “has become overwhelming.”

One result: “a comprehensive review of staffing requirements is currently under way.”

In other words, this more expensive MINUSTAH budget for Haiti’s “critical actor” could well be followed by an even more expensive one.

George Russell is executive editor of Fox News.