Chennai:
This
year’s International Day of United Nations Peacekeepers is an opportunity to
raise awareness about new developments in the field while honouring those who
lost their lives over the past year serving under the blue flag, according to UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon
In his message to mark the
International Day of UN peacekeepers, Ban said United Nations peacekeeping is
increasingly called on to deploy multi-dimensional operations to help countries
transition from conflict to peace, with a significant focus on protecting
civilians, including the most vulnerable among them: women and children.
“To meet emerging threats and rise to
new challenges, United Nations peacekeeping is adapting its policies to better
fulfil its mandates to bring lasting peace to war-torn countries,” he said.
“We see one example of a new approach
in the Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC), where the Security Council has
authorized the deployment of an “Intervention Brigade”, as well as unarmed,
unmanned aerial vehicles to improve our ability to operate in this vast region,”
he said.
Peacekeepers in Mali will operate under
tough conditions marked by armed groups that threaten national and regional
security. The mission will help stabilize the country, foster national
reconciliation and protect civilians, he said.
UN peacekeeping is also working to help
reform national rule of law institutions. By strengthening the police,
courts and corrections, UN peacekeeping forges trust in local authorities.
A fair and predictable rule of law system contributes, in turn, to
stability and sustainable development long after our troops leave, he said.
While we welcome these advances, we
acknowledge that peacekeeping will always carry risks. Unidentified
assailants have recently ambushed and killed peacekeepers in the DRC, Sudan and
South Sudan, while blue helmets serving in the Middle East have been detained,
he added.
One hundred and eleven peacekeeping
personnel died last year, and more than 3,100 have lost their lives during
the UN’s 65-year history of peacekeeping.
“On this International Day, let us pay
solemn tribute to those who have fallen, support the more than
111,000 serving soldiers and police from 116 countries, and continue
adapting our operations to better help civilians who need protection and
support,” he said.
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