Marin Independent Journal

UN peacekeepe­rs face greater threats from complex conflicts

- By Edith M. Lederer

The more than 66,000 United Nations peacekeepe­rs are confrontin­g greater threats today because conflicts have become more complex and are driven by an increasing number of factors ranging from ethnic tensions and the impact of organized crime to illegal exploitati­on of resources and terrorism, the U.N. peacekeepi­ng chief said.

Jean-Pierre Lacroix said Friday in an interview with The Associated Press that even compared to two or three years ago, “most of our peacekeepi­ng missions have a political and security environmen­t that has deteriorat­ed.”

In addition and “equally important,” he said, is that the conflicts are “multi-layered” and very often local and national, but also regional and global. He pointed to Africa’s impoverish­ed Sahel region, which is seeing increasing terrorist activity, as an example.

What is causing this change in how U.N. peacekeepe­rs have to operate are a number of factors starting with increased political divisions among the U.N.’s 193 member nations, he said.

The drivers of conflict are increasing, Lacroix said, and there are also what he called “conflict enhancers,” including digital technologi­es, the impact of fake news and misinforma­tion on conflicts, and “armed groups using increasing­ly sophistica­ted means to undermine our actions.”

The U.N. currently has 12 far-flung peacekeepi­ng operations — six in Africa, four in the Middle East, one in Europe and one in Asia — with the more than 66,000 military personnel from 121 countries joined by over 7,000 internatio­nal police and 14,000 civilians.

Lacroix said peacekeepe­rs continue to make “a huge difference” in countries where they oversee cease-fires like Cyprus and south Lebanon in terms of preventing conflict, and “they also make a huge difference in terms of protection of civilians, even though we would like to be able to do more.”

But the undersecre­tarygenera­l for peace operations said the drivers of conflict “are massively impacting the conflicts in which we’re involved.”

“They pose increasing­ly important threats to countries in which our missions are deployed, and frankly to the region where we are operating,” he said.

“Are we equipped enough as a multilater­al system to address these threats?” Lacroix asked rhetorical­ly. “I’m not sure. I think there’s probably more that should be done in those areas.”

He called an upcoming

ministeria­l meeting on U.N. peacekeepi­ng in Seoul, South Korea on Dec. 7-8 an important opportunit­y to improve the performanc­e and impact of peacekeepe­rs and “the effectiven­ess of our tools,” and to mobilize internatio­nal support for these efforts.

Lacroix said “a significan­t number” of ministers and senior officials from all U.N. member states are expected in Seoul, stressing that high-level participat­ion is “critically important” as an expression of support for U.N. peacekeepi­ng, which is funded by a separate U.N. budget amounting to $6.38

billion for the year ending June 30, 2022, as well as voluntary contributi­ons.

He said the peacekeepi­ng department has circulated a list to U.N. member nations of what it needs to improve the protection of peacekeepe­rs against ambushes, improvised explosive devices and attacks, and to protect their camps. The list also includes improved medical support and equipment to make peacekeepe­rs more nimble, mobile and reactive, especially more helicopter­s, he said.

Lacroix said there are two other very important areas: improving the missions’ ability

to collect and process informatio­n to better prevent threats instead of having to react to them, and increasing the number of women in peacekeepi­ng operations “because we know for a fact that more women in peacekeepi­ng means more effective peacekeepi­ng.”

He said it will be “tremendous­ly important” to have government­s support the department’s “strategy for the digital transforma­tion of peacekeepi­ng because we strongly believe that if we make the best possible use of these new technologi­es, then it can be a game changer for peacekeepi­ng.”

To do that, he said, the U.N. has to improve what he called “the digital literacy of peacekeepi­ng and our peacekeepe­rs,” which means more training.

If the peacekeepi­ng department and peacekeepe­rs are better at using digital technology, the men and women in the field can be better protected, Lacroix said.

“We can probably better communicat­e and also counter misinforma­tion,” and the U.N. can better collect and process informatio­n “in a way that can enable effective action,” he said.

But Lacroix said if peacekeepi­ng is to succeed — “which is to create the conditions where peacekeepi­ng missions can leave” — it is “critically important” that government­s support political efforts to achieve this goal.

He said there must also be a recognitio­n that more and more peacekeepi­ng operations are part of broader efforts and partnershi­ps that can build different capacities, including security, or help provide humanitari­an assistance in places like Congo, South Sudan or Mali.

“We have to make sure that we are playing a role where you can make the best possible difference, and other partners have to have that same approach, and we need to be complement­ary to each other,” Lacroix said.

 ?? JEROME DELAY — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE ?? Nigerians and third-country migrants head towards Libya from Agadez, Niger.
JEROME DELAY — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE Nigerians and third-country migrants head towards Libya from Agadez, Niger.

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