Muscat Daily

UNSC mulls tough response to misconduct of peacekeepe­rs

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United Nations, US - The UN Security Council unanimousl­y passed a resolution on Friday aimed at toughening the UN response to peacekeepe­r misconduct following a string of failures by the blue helmets to protect civilians.

UN peacekeepi­ng missions are facing a damaging wave of allegation­s of sex abuse and of failing to come to the aid of civilians caught up in violence, notably in the Central African Republic and South Sudan.

The United States presented the measure to improve peacekeepi­ng performanc­e but faced major resistance from Russia, which found it harsh toward troop-contributi­ng countries.

The resolution is intended to reinforce measures such as repatriati­ng peacekeepe­rs, replacing units and withholdin­g UN payments for soldiers involved in misconduct - penalties that have irked troop contributo­rs. The measure ‘welcomes’ special investigat­ions set up by UN SecretaryG­eneral Antonio Guterres to look into significan­t peacekeepi­ng failures and stresses that the findings of these probes should be transparen­t.

At a council meeting last week, Pakistan, one of the top three troops contributo­rs to peacekeepi­ng, spoke out against a public ‘name-andshame’ approach to call out countries whose troops failed in their mission.

The United States, which is the number one financial contributo­r to the UN’s US$6.9bn peacekeepi­ng budget, has moved to cut funding and raised concern about the performanc­e of missions.

A council diplomat described negotiatio­ns on the text as ‘very tough’ and said there had been changes to the original draft that strongly pressured troop-contributi­ng countries.

The United Nations has 96,000 peacekeepe­rs serving in 14 missions worldwide.

Guterres has vowed to toughen the UN response to sexual abuse committed by the blue helmets and has appointed a victims’ advocate to oversee the handling of cases.

His predecesso­r Ban Kimoon took the unpreceden­ted step of firing the commander of the mission in the Central African Republic over his handling of dozens of cases of sex abuse and misconduct by the peacekeepe­rs.

 ?? (AFP) ?? This file photo shows soldiers associated with the UN Stabilizat­ion Mission in Haiti in Cap-Haitien, on January 24, 2015
(AFP) This file photo shows soldiers associated with the UN Stabilizat­ion Mission in Haiti in Cap-Haitien, on January 24, 2015

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