The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Canada launches peacekeepi­ng mission in Mali

- — AFP

GAO, Mali: Canadian armed forces officially launched their peacekeepi­ng mission in restive northern Mali Tuesday, marking Ottawa’s return to the blue helmets after more than a decade.

The contingent of 250 soldiers and six helicopter­s is expected to conduct medical evacuation­s in the north of the country from yesterday as they take over from German troops.

“My team and I are extremely proud to wear the blue beret as UN soldiers from Canada,” Canadian commander Colonel Chris McKenna said at a ceremony at the UN base in Gao.

“It has been several years since Canada has had a large UN footprint and the pride that we take in hoisting the United Nations flag beside our beloved red-andwhite Maple Leaf should not be underestim­ated,” he said.

The Canadian troops, who are on a one-year mission, have been deployed since the start of July at Camp Castor, which also hosts German and Dutch troops.

While Canada originated the concept of peacekeepe­rs in the 1950s, it has not deployed troops on UN peacekeepi­ng missions for more than a decade.

At the start of the year, the UN had only about 50 Canadian peacekeepe­rs. The Malian mission also marks the return of the Canadian military to Africa for the first time since the Rwandan genocide in 1994, when Ottawa lead the UN mission there.

Islamist extremists linked to AlQaeda took control of the desert in northern Mali in early 2012, but were largely driven out in a French-led military operation launched in January 2013.

However large stretches of the country remain outside of the control of the Malian, French and UN forces, which are frequent targets of attacks.

“It’s always a risk being in a dangerous place but we take security measures to protect our military, our citizens so that the risks are minimised,” Canadian ambassador Louis Verret told AFP.

The UN mission, MINUSMA, deployed to Mali in 2013 in the wake of the French anti-jihadist operation and comprises some 14,000 military personnel and police.

It is currently the most deadly UN peacekeepi­ng mission, having lost about 170 members including 104 killed in hostile acts — more than half the UN soldiers killed during this period around the world.

 ?? — AFP photo ?? A Canadian soldier of the MINUSMA salutes as Germans soldiers stand guard at the contigents’ camp in Gao.
— AFP photo A Canadian soldier of the MINUSMA salutes as Germans soldiers stand guard at the contigents’ camp in Gao.

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