Regina Leader-Post

Conservati­ves question Mali peacekeepi­ng plan

Government poised to make announceme­nt

- Morgan Lowrie and Amy Smart

The Conservati­ve defence critic is questionin­g the Trudeau government’s decision to send peacekeepi­ng troops to the troubled West African nation of Mali.

A senior government source, speaking on condition of anonymity, confirmed late Friday night that Canada will dispatch an aviation task force to Mali as part of a United Nations peacekeepi­ng mission, in a move defence critic James Bezan said raises more questions than answers.

“Why did it take them so long to make this announceme­nt and is this in Canada’s national interest or is this in the Liberals’ interest?” Bezan said. “Are they making this announceme­nt because of all the criticism they’ve received for breaking the promise of deploying 600 troops and 150 police officers on UN missions, when we’re at the lowest levels in history?”

The government source said the task force will be in Mali for up to 12 months and an official announceme­nt on the deployment will be made Monday.

In terms of troop numbers, Canada is currently at a historic low for participat­ion in peacekeepi­ng missions. Canada had a total of 43 peacekeepe­rs deployed around the world at the end of December, the most recent UN numbers indicate, down from 62 in November.

The decline, largely the result of a reduction in the number of Canadian police officers deployed to Haiti, means Canada has fewer peacekeepe­rs in the field than at any point since the 1950s.

Bezan said the Conservati­ves want to see Canada involved in more peacekeepi­ng, including in Ukraine. But he said it must be in the national interest and in some cases, it may be preferable to fight under Canadian instead of UN command.

“We know that this is incredibly dangerous,” Bezan said. “We support our troops and know they are completely capable of doing it. But we are hesitant about putting our troops in harms way under UN command.”

He said peacekeepi­ng decisions should not be made based on nostalgia about blue helmets.

“There is concern about how we are going to keep the peace when we have insurgenci­es, terrorism, failed states and multiple different missions going at the same time and no answers of how this is in Canada’s national interest,” he said.

Mali has been in turmoil since a 2012 uprising prompted soldiers to overthrow the country’s president. The power vacuum that was created led to an Islamic insurgency and a French-led war that ousted the jihadists from power in 2013.

However, insurgents remain active and the UN has seen its multinatio­nal peacekeepi­ng force in the region suffer more than 150 fatalities since its mission began in 2013.

François Audet, who studies Canadian humanitari­an policy and internatio­nal relations at the Universite du Quebec a Montreal, said there are four million people in need of aid in the country, many of whom are inaccessib­le to civilian aid workers because it’s too dangerous.

The role of peacekeepi­ng operations is to develop secure zones to permit civilians to reach those population­s, he said.

Audet said the country has been made more dangerous in recent years with the arrival of armed factions in the months and years after the toppling of the Libyan regime in 2011.

“It’s a dangerous country for civilians and especially for western interests,” Audet said in a French-language interview. “So if you’re a developmen­t or aid organizati­on, your access outside of the big cities like Bamako is extremely difficult, if not impossible.”

He said Canada’s entry into the conflict is “very late.”

In November, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau pledged during a peacekeepi­ng summit in Vancouver to offer six helicopter­s and two transport aircraft, plus their associated pilots and support personnel, as well as a 200-strong quick reaction force to the UN.

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