Regina Leader-Post

MORE CANADIAN SOLDIERS ARRIVED IN MALI ON MONDAY, BUT THEY WERE WARNED BY GERMAN PEACEKEEPE­RS ABOUT THE WEATHER, ISOLATION AND UN RED TAPE.

German peacekeepe­rs share knowledge

- Lee Berthiaume

WITH EVERY MISSION, WE HAVE TO CARRY DOUBLE THE PATIENTS WE HAD IN AFGHANISTA­N.

GAO, MALI • A second contingent of Canadian soldiers flew into the dusty, sunbaked airstrip here Monday to get ready for the arrival next month of the eight helicopter­s Canada has pledged to the UN mission in Mali for the next year.

As the sweaty Canadians unloaded their gear at a nearby UN base in the surprising­ly sticky heat, moving into the tents and barracks that are their new homes, a number of German soldiers sat and watched from the shade.

Germany has a sizable presence at the UN base in Gao that includes a detachment of NH-90 helicopter­s, bolstered by several similar aircraft from Belgium, for evacuating injured peacekeepe­rs from the field.

Those Belgian helicopter­s were on display Monday as they returned to base and landed within the fortified perimeter only long enough to take on some fuel before taking off and disappeari­ng into the distance again.

But both Germany and Belgium will officially end their medical-evacuation missions on Saturday, at which point the NH-90s will be packed up and returned home to make way for their Canadian counterpar­ts.

Many of the Germans here previously served in Afghanista­n, and while they say there are many similariti­es, there are also key difference­s, starting with the fact they have not fired a single shot or taken any fire.

That may seem odd, given the peacekeepi­ng mission’s deadly reputation, but it reflects the fact most of those killed have been blue helmets from less developed countries caught in ambushes and roadside-bomb attacks.

While the Germans and Belgians have not been attacked, they are there to help with the aftermath; over the past 18 months, they have evacuated 43 wounded peacekeepe­rs from the field over the course of 16 flights.

While the number of flights may not seem high, Col. Andreas Schwartz, one of two emergency physicians responsibl­e for treating patients on the helicopter­s, says the patient-to-flight ratio far surpasses what was seen in Afghanista­n.

“The statistics say that over the last 18 months, we have half the missions but we have to take care of double the patients,” Schwartz said. “With every mission, we have to carry double the patients we had in Afghanista­n.”

There are many other difference­s between the UN mission in Mali and Afghanista­n, where NATO was in charge, said Lt.-Col. Kai Eggert, chief of operations for the multinatio­nal helicopter detachment.

Those include the heat and isolation in Gao, where it can take weeks to get spare parts, a lack of radios among some contingent­s from less developed countries, and the absence of exchanges of fire.

“We never received any fire from ground forces,” Eggert said as he stood next to one of the Belgian NH-90s where it was protected from the sun inside a large hangar.

“Quite the opposite. What we experience­d is whenever we brought up a helicopter on scene, it was enough of a show of force and the terrorist armed groups ceased fire and vanished into the desert.”

Yet one of the most surprising difference­s, says Eggert, has been how the Germans have often been forced to wait hours before the UN headquarte­rs in Bamako gives them permission to fly to the scene of an attack.

When a UN convoy or patrol is attacked, the request for help must follow a chain that runs from the unit commander on the ground through various other commanders and back to the UN headquarte­rs in Bamako.

While that alone can take a long time, given patchy communicat­ions networks and the vagaries of the UN command system, military and civilian officials must then meet to discuss whether to send a military or civilian helicopter.

That discussion can also take time — in part, the Germans say, because one of the key factors is cost, requiring various calculatio­ns to determine the most cost-effective option.

While Lt.-Col. Sebastian Koehler, commander of the multinatio­nal helicopter detachment, acknowledg­ed both the challenge and frustratio­n of such delays, he also noted that the UN is under pressure to be costconsci­ous.

The UN has faced more scrutiny than in the past to account for its spending because of past corruption as well as shrinking budgets, particular­ly as the U.S. has cut its funding for peacekeepi­ng.

The impact is nonetheles­s clear as the Germans and Belgians have faced waits of up to 17 hours before launching a mission, which Schwartz, in his capacity as an emergency physician, says is “not tolerable.”

He said they want to be launched as soon as possible regardless of any financial aspects. “The time between the incidents and the first treatment decides the outcome of the patient.”

 ?? SEAN KILPATRICK/THE CANADIAN PRESS ??
SEAN KILPATRICK/THE CANADIAN PRESS
 ?? SEAN KILPATRICK / THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? A German soldier rides past Canadian troops as they make their way to a briefing at a UN base in Gao, Mali, on Monday. German peacekeepe­rs are ending their medical evacuation missions there on Saturday.
SEAN KILPATRICK / THE CANADIAN PRESS A German soldier rides past Canadian troops as they make their way to a briefing at a UN base in Gao, Mali, on Monday. German peacekeepe­rs are ending their medical evacuation missions there on Saturday.

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