The Borneo Post (Sabah)

UN report backs peacekeepi­ng changes in face of deaths

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UNITED NATIONS, United States: UN peacekeepi­ng forces need to change the way they operate and not shy away from using force to reverse a worrying trend of escalating fatalities, according to a new report made public Monday.

The recommenda­tions were submitted to UN Secretary General Antonio Guterres in December by a team of experts headed up by Brazilian lieutenant general Carlos Alberto dos Santos Cruz, a former UN commander in Haiti and the Democratic Republic of Congo.

“The United Nations and troopand police-contributi­ng countries need to adapt to a new reality: the blue helmet and the United Nations flag no longer offer ‘natural’ protection,” the report stated.

“Unfortunat­ely, hostile forces do not understand a language other than force. To deter and repel attacks and to defeat attackers, the United Nations needs to be strong and not fear to use force when necessary,” it recommende­d.

Casualties have spiked since 2013, with 195 personnel in UN peacekeepi­ng missions killed by acts of violence — more than during any other five-year period in history. Last year saw the highest number of fatalities since 1994, with 56 deaths.

“These numbers go beyond a normal or acceptable level of risk,” the report said. “Something needs to change to reverse the trend.”

As missions face threatened budget cuts from the Trump administra­tion, the report said troops are often too “in a defensive posture” and need to “take the initiative to neutralise and eliminate” threats to their security.

The report recommende­d that the United Nations start replacing officials, contingent­s and units that lack capacity to carry out their mandate.

Deficient pre-deployment training is a main cause of fatalities, it said. Among the recommenda­tions were “surprise exercises and tests” to verify troop readiness.

The report also called for missions to be strengthen­ed with sophistica­ted equipment such as mine-protected vehicles, special weapons and night-vision goggles.

Missions in Africa are the most vulnerable: the UN mission in Mali has lost 91 people since 2013, 29 in the Central African Republic and 26 in Sudan’s war-torn region of Darfur. — AFP

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