The Jewish Daily Forward
December 22, 2006
UN Chief Pressured To Bypass Businessman
By Marc Perelman
The incoming United Nations secretary-general has yet to take office,
but a controversy is already engulfing his nascent relationship with the
American Jewish community.
South Korea's Ban-Ki Moon [a Moonie
http://tinyurl.com/wo5zl ], who will begin his term January 1
with little experience regarding Israel and its supporters, is coming under fire
for his team’s relationship with a little-known Orthodox businessman and
activist named Michael Landau.
Michael Landau, a real estate developer and the chairman of the Council of
Orthodox Jewish Organizations (COJO) of the West Side in Manhattan (
http://www.westsidecojo.com), has been actively courting the new
secretary-general’s entourage and presenting himself as a go-between to
help Ban-Ki Moon navigate the UN's notoriously fraught relationship with
Jewish groups.
But several diplomats and major Jewish
organizations are questioning whether Landau’s business activities could
influence the advice he would give Ban-Ki Moon, pointing to his courtship of
African ambassadors at a time when he was involved in mining activities on the
continent. Some critics fear that a backlash would be damaging to the Jewish
community, Israel and the new secretary-general.
Landau is reportedly backed by Malcolm Hoenlein (
http://www.conferenceofpresidents.org/content.asp?id=63), the
influential executive vice-chairman of the Conference of Presidents of Major
American Jewish Organizations, though he is not affiliated with the umbrella
group, widely viewed as the Jewish community’s leading voice on Middle Eastern
affairs. Critics claim Hoenlein is pushing Landau as a go-between in order to
become the community’s main interlocutor to Ban-Ki Moon.
"It is inappropriate for any of us to promote a specific individual as
a liaison without consulting the community leadership", said Abraham (Abe)
Foxman (
http://tinyurl.com/y2uvx4), national director of the
Anti-Defamation League (ADL). "The secretary-general should reach out to all of
us".
The ADL, the American Jewish Committee and B’nai B’rith International
have refused to attend meetings with Ban and his close circle proposed by Landau
in recent weeks, sources familiar with the situation told the Forward. On the
other hand, they added, Landau has garnered some support from the World Jewish
Congress. Landau declined several requests for comment. Hoenlein did not return
calls.
On the day of his swearing-in, December 14, Ban made an appearance at
the annual dinner of the Presidents’ Conference. Even while acknowledging that
attending the event was a good way for Ban to show his willingness to engage the
Jewish community, some observers fretted that this was in fact a nod to
Hoenlein.
In a series of interviews, several Jewish communal leaders, UN
officials and diplomats expressed deep misgivings about entrusting a
little-known entity like Landau with a prominent intermediary role. Although no
one produced evidence about the incompatibility of his business activities and
his advocacy work, critics stressed that the recent trauma of the Iraq
oil-for-food scandal required extra caution to avoid adverse consequences for
Ban and the Jewish community.
Landau, who by all accounts is an engaging character, has been active
in computer software companies and advised at least one mining company in recent
years. His advocacy work is centered on the Coalition of Orthodox Jewish
Organizations of the West Side, which caters to local community needs. He is the
group’s chairman. He was also involved in the Jerusalem Coalition, which brought
together Orthodox Jewish Republicans, helping to organize a trip by Christian
conservative leader Gary Bauer to Israel in 2003.
In recent years, Landau has been involved in UN affairs, organizing
meetings, trips and receptions for ambassadors — often, communal sources said,
working with the President’s Conference. Landau has attended meetings between
Jewish groups and visiting foreign dignitaries on the sidelines of the annual UN
General Assembly during which he was presented as representing the Presidents’
Conference, according to participants in the meetings. "I don’t have a problem
with one or several go-betweens", said Shai Franklin, director of international
organizations at the World Jewish Congress. "No one should be cut out, there is
room for everyone, be it an individual or a group".
Landau also received strong backing for his advocacy work on behalf of
the Orthodox community of the Upper West Side. Rabbi Alan Schwarz, religious
leader of a local Orthodox congregation and president of the group chaired by
Landau, praised his boundless energy and his ability to solve mundane issues.
Hank Sheinkopf, a political consultant, described Landau as a tireless
advocate for the Orthodox and the larger Jewish community, saying that his
cultivating of ties with African ambassadors was smart diplomacy.
One area of concern for some critics is Landau’s close work with
several African ambassadors at a time when he was in business with a Canadian
company mining gold on the continent back in 2005.
At the time, Landau was on good terms with Jean Ping, the foreign minister
of Gabon, who held the position of president of the General Assembly. Landau
organized receptions and meetings for Jean Ping. Searchgold’s activities in
Gabon picked up in early 2005, with the company announcing that it had raised
more than $1.1 million, resumed drilling at its Bakoudou mine and obtained a new
exploration permit. But Searchgold parted ways with Landau four months later.
Searchgold director Maurice Giroux told the Forward that Landau was not a good
fit and that his contacts in Gabon did not prove useful. He declined to
elaborate. Requests for comment to the Gabonese mission to the UN were not
returned.
Several sources said on condition of anonymity that Landau had openly
bragged about his clout with sub-Saharan African ambassadors. "He is a
businessman, first and foremost", said a person familiar with Landau’s
interactions with African diplomats.
Sources said that Landau helped set up a trip to Israel in early 2004
for six African diplomats sponsored by the American-Israel Friendship League, a
nonprofit chaired by Kenneth Bialkin, a former chairman of the ADL and the
Presidents’ Conference.
Several Jewish communal activists speaking on the condition of
anonymity said that they have heard directly from Israeli officials about
concerns regarding Landau. At least one top Jewish communal leader passed his
concerns to the leadership of the Conference of Presidents. Israeli diplomats at
the UN mission declined to comment.
"Ban should get a sense of the diversity of our community", said Sybil
Kessler, director of UN affairs at B’nai B’rith International. "I would
like him to appoint a senior official as a focal point".
This is a reference to the "focal points" created by outgoing
Secretary-General Kofi Annan (
http://tinyurl.com/yynryf) within
his secretariat to facilitate dealings with a variety of groups or interests not
formally represented at the UN One of Annan ’s lieutenants served as a liaison
to the American Jewish community, a position Annan saw as a key to improving the
UN’s historically strained relationship with Israel and, cynics would add, to
currying favor in Washington during hard times.
The current "focal point" is Edward Mortimer, a UN official from
Britain who will return to Europe when Annan officially finishes his term in the
next few weeks. Much speculation has centered on whether Ban will maintain the
position. "I briefed the new S.G. and his team and advised them to keep the
focal point, which was appreciated by the Jewish community", Mortimer
said.
A senior secretariat official also said Ban was leaning toward
appointing a point-person on his staff and steering clear of an outside fixer.
Some U.N. officials have quietly discouraged Ban’s team from granting Landau a
prominent role. While no personnel announcement has yet been made, the message
seems to have been heard.
Yeocheol Yoon, a political counselor at the South Korean mission to the
U.N. and an adviser to Ban, told the Forward that the new secretary-general was
talking to a variety of Jewish groups and representatives and that Landau was
merely one interlocutor. He added that the secretary was likely to appoint a
focal point within his office. "We’ll do it our way, but we’ll certainly have
someone on the inside and we never had the idea of tapping someone from the
outside".
Related:
---------
The Moonies are in full control of the UN now (October 16,
2006)
Malcolm
Hoenlein introduces symposium forcused on bringing charges of Incitement to
Genocide against Iranian President Ahmadinejad.