UN probe into Hammarskjold’s death digs up new information
UNITED NATIONS: An investigation into the death of United Nations secretary general Dag Hammarskjold in a mysterious plane crash in southern Africa more than 50 years ago has come up with new information, a UN spokesman said on Friday.
A three-member panel has presented its final report on the Swedish diplomat’s death to Secretary General Ban Ki-moon, who plans to make it public soon.
The investigators traveled to Zambia to meet “new witnesses” and “successfully gathered additional new information” from governments and from private archives in Belgium, Britain and Sweden, said spokesman Stephane Dujarric.
Hammarskjold died at age 56 when his plane crashed on Sept 17 or 18, 1961, near Ndola, in northern Rhodesia, now known as Zambia, as he was on his way to negotiate a ceas fire for Katanga province in Congo.
The UN’s second secretary general was to meet Moise Tshombe, the leader of the province of Katanga, which had seceded from the Congo and proclaimed its independence.
In Sept 2013, a commission had called on the United Nations to reopen the investigation, saying there was “convincing evidence” that the UN chief’s plane was shot down as it prepared to land in Ndola.
Witnesses questioned by the commission spoke of the presence of another aircraft that fired on the DC-6.
The commission, which was composed of jurists and diplomats, also asked the US National Security Agency to provide access to recordings it may have of conversations in the plane’s cockpit and radio messages that the crew may have made in 1961. Until now, that material has been classified as secret. The UN General Assembly in late December adopted a resolution, drafted by Sweden, that called for the new investigation to finally shed light on the top diplomat’s death.
Published in Dawn June 13th, 2015
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