Matthew Russell Lee |
UNITED NATIONS, July 3 -- With the UN less and less willing to answer questions, whether about which Congolese Army units it works with or even which Syria villages Secretary General Ban Ki-moon was referring to in a July 2 statement, there's been talk of a media strike at the UN.
Some
have proposed not going to the UN noon briefing, not asking questions, even not
writing stories. But that might be just what the UN has in mind. And many large
media have already reduced their UN presence and coverage substantially.
The
view of Inner City Press and the new Free UN
Coalition for Access is that in New York and places like it, the better
response is simply to report more, to ask more questions and report on the
(non) answers, to talk with more sources and dig deeper.
But
we realize that in some other places the possibilities and dynamics are
different.
For
example in Somaliland, on which Inner City Press has been reporting for months,
Free UN Coalition for Access member
Mohamoud Walaaleye has protested the Hargeisa Regional Court's sentencing to
prison of Hubaal newspaper's manager Mohamed Ahmed Jama Aloley for one year and
editor Hassan Hussein Kefkef, for two years.
This
was on charges of “propagating false information,” reporting on smuggling by
diplomats and the capacities of elected officials, and came after an attack on
the newspaper's office by authorities and a suspension of publication.
Mohamoud Walaaleye |
Mohamoud
Walaaleye, who asks questions not only in Hargeisa but to UN officials, tells
us that the “Somaliland media association, (SOLJA) is incapacitated to reach a
common stand condemning this action. For that, I, Mohamoud Walaaleye, reached a
decision of withholding all my journalism activities till the discharged of the
jail sentences of my colleagues at Hubaal newspaper.”
Now
that, and to a lesser degree this, is what solidarity is all about. By
contrast, UN headquarters' chosen partner UNCA tried in
2012 to get the investigative press thrown out of the UN;
its first
vice president passed internal “UNCA only” documents immediately to UN
officials, here.
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