The Standard (St. Catharines)

Peacekeepe­rs in Mali concerned by delays in evacuation­s

- LEE BERTHIAUME

OTTAWA — Concerns about potential delays in the approval of life-saving medical evacuation­s are circling around Canada’s United Nations peacekeepi­ng mission in Mali, which in recent days conducted its first two operations in the war-torn West African nation.

Both operations involved ferrying Dutch reconnaiss­ance teams to different parts of the sparsely populated countrysid­e around the northern city of Gao, where the Canadians and Dutch peacekeepi­ng contingent­s are based, said Canadian commander Colonel Chris McKenna.

“We landed near the village, they (the Dutch) walked in and obviously there was some engagement with the locals, they projected that UN presence out into the countrysid­e a bit and then we picked them up at the end of the day and we brought them home,” McKenna said.

The support flights marked the first planned missions since the Canadian force, which includes eight helicopter­s and 250 aircrew and soldiers, took over from a combined German and Belgian helicopter contingent and became fully operationa­l last week.

Yet while the two flights appear to have went off without a hitch, there are fears the same won’t be said when it comes to the real reason the Canadians are in

Mali: to evacuate and provide emergency medical assistance to peacekeepe­rs wounded or injured in the field.

Those fears are based on complaints made by frustrated German aircrew before they were relieved by the Canadians. The Germans said they were forced to struggle with delays in getting approval for medical evacuation­s due to patchy communicat­ions and UN officials wrangling over cost.

Some of those delays lasted hours, the Germans told The Canadian Press during a visit to Gao in June — time that could mean the difference between life and death for injured peacekeepe­rs in Mali’s harsh environmen­t and barren landscape.

“It’s one of the things that concerns me based on what we got from the Germans as well,” McKenna acknowledg­ed during a telephone interview from Mali.

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 dodgy communicat­ion 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 said, because one of the key factors is money.

The UN has faced more scrutiny than ever before 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.

McKenna said he has contacted various UN commanders and officials around the country and that Canada plans to place several officers at the UN mission headquarte­rs in Bamako to speed the flow of informatio­n and decision-making in an emergency.

More than 100 peacekeepe­rs have died from attacks and roadside bombs in Mali since the UN mission was establishe­d in 2013.

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