"A senior U.N. official, speaking on condition of anonymity, said that Guterres’s own views on the crisis are reflected in recent statements by the U.N.’s chief relief coordinator, Mark Lowcock..."
It's clear from this report - based on a UNDP memo, that as early as February 2021, there were voices inside the UN that were clear eyed about the Tigray conflict and the role of the TPLF in provoking it.
It appears that the UN had to make a choice at this time, whether to support the Govt. of Ethiopia, or to follow the advice of Mark Lowcock (notwithstanding clear knowledge of the overt aggression of the TPLF).
“Everything within the UN rule book tells us it is a moment to engage with the government and people of Ethiopia,” the memo reads. “It is an opportunity to put the humanitarian, development and peace nexus into action."
Unfortunately this advice was ignored.
Here we see @USAmbUN@LindaT_G's views at the time of a March 4th UNSC meeting. Which on the basis of what we saw last week have not changed, notwithstanding a massive TPLF offensive into Amhara/Afar regions.
This article pinpoints where things went wrong.
"The memo summarizes a “scoping” mission to Ethiopia by [which included] meetings with [PM] Abiy and Ethiopian President Sahle-Work Zewde. It suggests that Ethiopia’s leadership is open to a broader role by the United Nations."
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The 9/3/21 @ForeignPolicy story in quoted thread, provides us with a clear moment when the UN's effort to address the conflict in Tigray went horribly wrong, in large part - it seems - because @antonioguterres followed the wrong advice.
And, on the basis of recent events, it points to the role played by specific personalities and internal power politics in the United Nations. Putting a particular spotlight on UK UN official Sir Mark Lowcock >> en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mark_Lowc…
Sir Mark Lowcock, left the UN at an auspicious date in the history of this horrific conflict in Ethiopia
On the 19th of July:
- The 2nd GERD filling was completed ... egyptindependent.com/ethiopia-annou…
"The Tigray People’s Liberation Front (TPLF), which ruled Ethiopia — undemocratically — before Mr. Abiy’s rise to power in 2018, is hardly blameless." - @washingtonpost Editorial Board 7/10/21 washingtonpost.com/opinions/2021/…
@washingtonpost The @washingtonpost Editorial Board has been one of the worst offenders in terms of pro-TPLF editorials on the Tigray Conflict. Egregiously so. This editorial is different, and appears to based on actual research into the issue, rather than TPLF talking points.
@washingtonpost And it has even managed to avoid perpetuating the "Big Lie" in the Tigray information space:
"[TPLF] forces responded to a series of heavy-handed measures by the central government with a violent uprising in November 2020, triggering a joint offensive by [the Govt. of Ethiopia]"
This (2nd image) is what >> un.org/ruleoflaw/them… << the @UN says about the the need for Freedom of Information laws to be in place in nation states to protect freedom of expression as per the Universal Declaration of Human Rights.
And this is a recent (2020) statement issued by the independent OHCHR [Office of the high commissioner of human rights] issued about the absence of implementation of Freedom of Information within UN institutions. ohchr.org/EN/NewsEvents/…
“The UN and many international organizations lack the kind of freedom of information policies that are increasingly the norm among governments,” - David Kaye said before presenting a new report to the UN General Assembly.
I'd love to know who @Jack talked to when he visited Ethiopia and what they talked about?
The role of @Twitter in reversing the information warfare dominance of TPLF, based mostly on lies, and replacing it with narratives based on reality has been an outstanding success.
There are spectacular differences between the approaches applied by the TPLF's cyber corps and those of Ethiopia.
TPLF: trolling, lying, gaslighting, bland unspecific allegations.
ETHIOPIA: humour, amplifying, revealing, informing, investigating, thanking and politely rebuffing
On the news media side the TPLF maintain clear dominance however. They have put in a lot off effort with things like story fabrication and placement, engineered and carefully deployed leaks.
This oped is indicates that from the outset the war, the UN’s perspective on Tigray was divorced from reality.
TPLF attacks on multiple ENDF bases, killing 1000s of soldiers & officers, stealing heavy weaponry and attacking a neighboring state. Is not a “political dispute”.
I can only conclude from this intemperate and delusional account of recent history that Sir Mark Lowcock is anxious, that when the causes of the humanitarian disaster in Tigray are determined, they will be sheeted home to his leadership.