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UN Debate Ends With Whimper, Kashmir To Nagorno-Karabakh, Circus Lea

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  • UN Debate Ends With Whimper, Kashmir To Nagorno-Karabakh, Circus Lea

    UN DEBATE ENDS WITH WHIMPER, KASHMIR TO NAGORNO-KARABAKH, CIRCUS LEAVING
    By Matthew Russell Lee

    Inner City Press
    Oct 1 2012

    UNITED NATIONS, October 1 -- The week-long UN General Debate, which
    began with Barack Obama as second speaker Tuesday twice citing KFC
    but not once Sudan, Haiti or Congo, ended with a whimper and not a
    bang on Monday night.

    Monday in the morning Syria and Sri Lanka spoke of double standards.

    By the afternoon it was Palau talking of sharks, Portugal saying
    we are "impotent witnesses" to what Canada's John Baird called the
    "crimson tide" in Syria.

    In the UN Media Center, which had been standing room only during
    Obama's speech, a dozen scribes remained. But the UN couldn't wait to
    the end to throw them out. "After Venezuela we're shutting it down
    and calling security," Inner City Press was told. And so it closed,
    even as Dominica gave its speech.

    Over in a photo booth above the GA Hall, Inner City Press watched
    the final 10 rights of reply play out. Pakistan's Deputy Permanent
    Representative said Jammu and Kashmir are not an integral part of
    India; the Indian political coordinator insisted that they were.

    Azerbaijan's Permanent Representative said Armenia had abused its right
    to speak, and left the hall before the Armenian duo's second reply.

    Eritrea downplayed its 2008 skirmish with Djibouti; Iran defended
    its right to peaceful nuclear use. In the end, new President of the
    General Assembly Vuk Jeremic of Serbia offered up a summary, smiling
    as he said how many spoke of territorial integrity. One thought of
    Kosovo, which does not have a seat. Nor does Somaliland, nor the
    apparently soon to be re-conquered Azawad in northern Mali.

    Much of the week's action took place outside the UN, for example at
    the Waldorf Astoria where the Friends of Syria met on Friday. In the
    side hallways of the lobby, European and African diplomats talked in
    a hush about the M23 rebels, then went their separate ways. Deals
    were cut, then diplomats cut out. Only the bitterness remained,
    the backwash of conflicts, the rights of reply. But it will continue.

    Watch this site.

    http://www.innercitypress.com/un67ga1whimper100112.html

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