Toronto Star

German peacekeepe­rs warn of red tape

UN facing more scrutiny due to past corruption and shrinking budgets

- LEE BERTHIAUME

The German helicopter crews being relieved by Canada’s peacekeepi­ng mission in Mali say they have struggled with delays in getting approval for life-saving medical evacuation­s as penny-wise UN officials wrangle over cost.

Some of those delays have lasted hours, they say — time that could mean the difference between life and death for injured peacekeepe­rs in Mali’s harsh environmen­t and barren landscape.

A second contingent of Canadian soldiers flew into the dusty, sun-baked 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 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.

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 that most of those killed have been blue helmets from less developed countries caught in ambushes and roadsidebo­mb 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-toflight ratio far surpasses what was seen 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. “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 cost-conscious.

 ?? THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Canadian troops arrive at a UN base in Gao, Mali, on Monday.
THE CANADIAN PRESS Canadian troops arrive at a UN base in Gao, Mali, on Monday.

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