Viet Nam News

UN chief sees Mali African force with stronger mandate

-

United Nations chief Antonio Guterres said Mali could collapse if a UN peacekeepi­ng mission withdrew, but suggested an option could be to replace it with an African Union force backed by a tougher operating mandate.

Guterres made the suggestion in an interview with the French radio station RFI ahead of a key decision on the future of the UN peacekeepi­ng force in Mali.

The Security Council next month is to determine whether to renew the mandate of the Integrated Stabilizat­ion Mission in Mali (MINUSMA), one of the UN'S biggest peacekeepi­ng operations.

"The true situation is that without MINUSMA, the risk of the country's collapse would be enormous," Guterres said in the interview, broadcast on Wednesday and Thursday.

"I am not going to propose that this mission be ended because I think that the consequenc­es would be terrible.

"But it (MINUSMA) is operating in circumstan­ces that really call for (not) a peacekeepi­ng force but a strong force (entrusted with) enforcing peace and fighting terrorism," he said.

"This strong force has to be an African force, from the African Union, but with a Chapter Seven Security Council mandate and obligatory financing," he said.

Chapter Seven of the United Nations Charter permits use of armed force in the event of a "threat to the peace."

MINUSMA, which has a current deployment of 14,000 troops and police, was created in 2013 to help support the fragile Sahel country in its fight against jihadist insurgents.

But the force has often been criticised for being shackled by a mandate that has left it unable to intervene robustly.

As a result, the security onus is thrust on Mali's poorly-equipped armed forces, according to this view.

Most of the contingent­s in MINUSMA come from African government­s. Guterres said he was aware of the scale of the UN'S task in Mali.

MINUSMA has lost 170 members since 2013, many of them killed by roadside bombs or in ambushes.

"It really is a very difficult... situation for us," he said.

He pointed to what he called "very difficult cooperatio­n" between Mali and MINUSMA on the question of human rights.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Vietnam