The Fiji Times

Sinai mission

500 troops leave for peacekeepi­ng duties

- By UNAISI RATUBALAVU

THOUSANDS of clapping and cheering people lined the streets of Suva to watch the farewell march by the 500 troops from Fiji bound for the internatio­nal force to Sinai in the Middle East.

This story was published in The Fiji Times on March 6, 1982, as Fiji is part of the internatio­nal force to police the withdrawal from the Sinai desert by the Israeli forces.

The report said that 80 per cent of the men in the parade were recruited for this mission four months ago and were given intensive training with the help of United States Army instructor­s.

Carrying American supplied automatic weapons, and some riding in American supplied vehicles, they paraded through the city’s main street for inspection by the then deputy prime minister, Ratu Sir Penaia Ganilau and lord mayor, councillor Joape Rokosoi.

The commander of the Royal Fiji Military Forces, Brigadier Ian Thorpe, said the main body of about 450 men was due to leave Fiji by air on March 18 and all would be in their assigned positions in Sinai by the end of March 1982.

Earlier in a brief ceremony at Albert Park, attended by Cabinet ministers, MPs, diplomats, and thousands of people, the prime minister Ratu Sir Kamisese Mara said Fiji’s decision to participat­e in the Sinai mission had been “clearly vindicated” by the participat­ion of nine other nations who made the force both “balanced and internatio­nal”.

“The participat­ion of Britain, Australia, New Zealand, France, Italy, the Netherland­s, Uruguay, Colombia and the United States will mean that the force is both balanced and internatio­nal,” he said.

“The decision to participat­e in the force had been criticised as hasty and open to Arab reprisals,” he said.

“The host countries of Egypt and Israel have welcomed our involvemen­t. Arab countries understand the reasons for us being there, and the condemnati­on that the critics feared has not materialis­ed,” Ratu Sir Kamisese added.

“Our presence in the multinatio­nal force in the Sinai will, I believe, make a positive contributi­on to the peace process in the Middle East,” he said.

“The government remains firmly committed to the view that a just and lasting peace can only be achieved by the withdrawal of Israel from all occupied territorie­s since the 1967 war, including the restoratio­n of the Golan Heights to Syria.

“We also believe in the right of Palestinia­n people to a homeland, and the recognitio­n of the right of Israel to live in peace within secure and internatio­nally recognised boundaries.

“We have not deviated from the policy, which is based on a resolution of the Security Council of the United Nations,” he added.

Our presence in the multinatio­nal force in the Sinai will, I believe, make a positive contributi­on to the peace process in the Middle East – Ratu Sir Kamisese Mara

 ?? Picture: FILE ?? Fiji’s contingent for the Sinai peacekeepi­ng mission march through Victoria Pde, Suva in 1982.
Picture: FILE Fiji’s contingent for the Sinai peacekeepi­ng mission march through Victoria Pde, Suva in 1982.
 ?? Picture: FILE ?? Fiji’s former prime minister, the late Ratu Sir Kamisese Mara inspects the guard of honour as 500 Fiji troops were to depart for Sinai.
Picture: FILE Fiji’s former prime minister, the late Ratu Sir Kamisese Mara inspects the guard of honour as 500 Fiji troops were to depart for Sinai.
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Fiji