Fostering Sudanese solidarity, the UN way

Reuters correspondent Louis Charbonneau blogs during the Security Council’s trip to Sudan. Faced with an overcrowded plane, the UN reportedly chucked a Sudanese photographer: A U.N. security officer decided that a Sudanese Reuters photographer would have to leave the plane, even though he had been invited to join the delegation and had all his permits ...

By , a professor at Indiana University’s Hamilton Lugar School of Global and International Studies.

Reuters correspondent Louis Charbonneau blogs during the Security Council's trip to Sudan. Faced with an overcrowded plane, the UN reportedly chucked a Sudanese photographer:

Reuters correspondent Louis Charbonneau blogs during the Security Council’s trip to Sudan. Faced with an overcrowded plane, the UN reportedly chucked a Sudanese photographer:

A U.N. security officer decided that a Sudanese Reuters photographer would have to leave the plane, even though he had been invited to join the delegation and had all his permits in order. The Reuters photographer protested but was told he would be ejected forcibly if he didn’t comply. When I asked why he was being singled out, the answer was: “He was the last one on.” The Reuters photographer realized that the only way to avoid an ugly confrontation was to retreat, so he did. The three other local Sudanese reporters — one of whom was a Reuters cameraman — joined him out of solidarity.

On a previous such trip, a UN guard inadvertently shot a hole in the Security Council’s plane.

David Bosco is a professor at Indiana University’s Hamilton Lugar School of Global and International Studies. He is the author of The Poseidon Project: The Struggle to Govern the World’s Oceans. Twitter: @multilateralist

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