Fiji Sun

UN SAYS 56 PEACEKEEPE­RS KILLED IN 2017, HIGHEST SINCE 1994

THE REPORT DOES NOT ADDRESS THE ISSUE OF MANDATES, BUT INSTEAD CONFINES ITS CONCLUSION­S TO OPERATIONA­L ISSUES IN MISSIONS IN THOSE COUNTRIES. Unfortunat­ely, hostile forces do not understand a language other than force, warns the report, titled Improving S

- SOURCE: UN NEWS CENTRE Feedback: jyotip@fijisun.com.fj

The United Nations should change the way it does business in high-security risk peacekeepi­ng operations, as the UN flag no longer offers ‘natural’ protection to mission personnel. This is according to a new report, which calls for better training for ‘blue helmets,’ more technology and greater freedom to respond to the threat posed by armed groups.

“Unfortunat­ely, hostile forces do not understand a language other than force,” warns the report, titled Improving Security of United Nations Peacekeepe­rs, arguing that projecting strength is more secure for uniformed and civilian personnel than riskaverse approaches.

Since 1948, more than 3500 personnel have lost their lives serving in UN peace operations with 943 due to acts of violence. Since 2013, casualties have spiked, with 195 deaths in violent attacks, more than during any other five-year period in history.

It was in this context that, in November 2017, UN SecretaryG­eneral António Guterres appointed Lieutenant General (Retired) Carlos Alberto dos Santos Cruz of Brazil to lead a high-level review to identify why the UN has had so many casualties caused by acts of violence in recent years, and what should be done to reduce these casualties. dos Santos Cruz previously served as Force Commander, of the UN Organisati­on Stabilisat­ion Mission in the Democratic Republic of the Congo (MONUSCO) from 2013 to 2015 and of the UN Stabilisat­ion Mission in Haiti (MINUSTAH) from 2007 to 2009. Two other authors are William R. Phillips, a retired United States Army Colonel, and former Mission Chief of Staff of the UN Multidimen­sional Integrated Stabilizat­ion Mission in Mali (MINUSMA), and Salvator Cusimano, the Special Assistant to the Director, Africa II Division of the Office of Operations in the United Nations Department of Peacekeepi­ng Operations.

The review team visited UN peacekeepi­ng operations in the Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC), the Central African Republic (CAR), Mali and South Sudan, accessed relevant internal UN data and conducted 160 interviews inform their work.

The report does not address the issue of mandates, but instead confines its conclusion­s to operationa­l issues in missions in those countries.

The report, which was submitted to the Secretary-General, states that with the influx of armed groups, extremists, organized crime, and other criminal elements and threats, the blue helmet and UN flag no longer offer ‘natural’ protection to peacekeepe­rs.

The review team identified four broad areas where the UN and member states must take actions to reduce fatalities.

These include:

changing mind-sets so that personnel are aware of the risks and empowered to take the initiative to deter, prevent, and respond to attacks;

improving capacities so that the mission and personnel are equipped and trained to operate in high-threat environmen­ts;

achieving a “threat sensitive mission footprint” that is aligned with mission mandates and limits the exposure of the mission to threat; and

enhancing accountabi­lity to ensure that those able to take actions to prevent fatalities and injuries live up to their responsibi­lities.

The UN Department­s of Peacekeepi­ng Operations and of Field Support have developed an action plan to implement the report’s recommenda­tions, according to a note to correspond­ents issued by the office of the spokespers­on for the UN Secretary-General.

The plan focuses on three main areas operationa­l behaviour and mindset; capacity building and readiness; and support issues

and includes immediate Headquarte­rs and field-level actions. The report was released on Monday to UN Member States at a session of the Special Committee on Peacekeepi­ng Operations by Jean-Pierre Lacroix, the Under-Secretary-General for Peacekeepi­ng Operations.

 ?? Photo: Waisea Nasokia ?? Republic of Fiji Military Forces personnel before departing for United Nations duties in Iraq in December, last year.
Photo: Waisea Nasokia Republic of Fiji Military Forces personnel before departing for United Nations duties in Iraq in December, last year.

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