Tag: peacekeeping

  • General Adedoja takes over as 23rd Peacekeeping Center Commandant

    General Adedoja takes over as 23rd Peacekeeping Center Commandant

    Former 31 Brigade Commander, Major General Ademola Taiwo Adedoja, has taken over command, as 23rd Commandant of Martin Luther Agwai International Leadership and Peacekeeping Centre, Jaji.

    Major General Adedoja took over command of the Centre from Major General Obinna Onubogu, who has been appointed as the new General Officer Commanding 2 Division Nigerian Army, Ibadan.

    Located in Jaji Military Cantonment, Kaduna State, Martin Luther Agwai International Leadership and Peacekeeping Centre, is a military training centre for international peacekeeping missions.

    While taking over, the new Commandant, Maj-General Adedoja promised to improve on the legacies of the immediate past Commandant.

    He also promised to operate an open-door leadership in his efforts to move the Centre forward.

    Read Also: Experts, journalists discuss future of preventive diplomacy, peacekeeping in Africa

    Earlier, the outgoing Commandant, Maj-General Onubogu said the Centre had over the years produced well-trained officers and soldiers who had upheld the flag of Nigeria at several international peacekeeping missions.

    He assured the new Commandant that, the Centre has eight highly qualified and professional Facilitators, as well as disciplined Instructors, all of whom are instrumental to the success of the courses run at the Centre.

    General Onubogu however asked the entire staff of the Centre to give all the support and cooperation extended to him during his tenure as the new Commandant.

    Highlights of the event were handing and taking of notes and flags of command as well as quarter guard inspection.

  • UN honours fallen peacekeepers

    UN honours fallen peacekeepers

    United Nations (UN) on Friday honoured peacekeepers who gave their lives for peace at battle in other countries.
    The UN during the celebration of International Day of Peacekeepers, honoured a total of 126 peacekeepers in the last year and 49 this year.
    The UN Secretary-General in his speech at the ceremony noted that ‘This is a time of danger & growth for blue helmets.
    At the ceremony, the UN specifically honoured the about 2,975 Nigerian peacekeepers who risk their lives on front-line around the world.
    Similarly, it held a Commemoration ceremony for 4 fallen Nigerian peacekeepers who lost their lives in 2014.
    The Nigerians are Lance Corporal Silas DANYAWU and Lance Corporal John JULIUS from the United Nations-African Union Mission in Darfur (UNAMID) and Corporal Adama IKE and Sergeant Rabiatu MUSA who both served with the United Nations Mission in Liberia (UNMIL).

    Below are some activities of the United Nations through the social media (twitter):

  • United Nations names first female Peacekeeping Mission Commander

    United Nations names first female Peacekeeping Mission Commander

    The United Nations has appointed the first woman to command one of the world body’s peacekeeping operations.

    Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon named Major General Kristin Lund, of Norway, as the force commander for the U.N. peacekeeping operation in Cyprus.

    In a statement, Ban said, “Major General Lund has had a distinguished military career, with over 34 years of military command and staff experience at national and international levels.”

    Lund will command some 900 troops and police that monitor a 112-mile buffer zone that has separated Greek and Turkish Cypriots for decades.

     

  • UN Security Council considers peacekeeping force

    UN Security Council considers peacekeeping force

    THE United Nations (UN) Security Council is to begin talks on the possibility of raising a peacekeeping force for Mali, an idea it had been uncomfortable with before France’s recent military intervention, envoys said on Wednesday.

    Last month, the 15-nation Council approved an African-led force for Mali that likely would have been funded with voluntary contributions from UN member states and trained by the European Union (EU).

    That force would not have begun operations until late this year against Islamist militants, who seized a vast region of Northern Mali since last year.

    However, France’s military intervention, which began on January 11 rendered that plan moot, diplomats said.

    “There is increasing talk of moving straight to a UN peacekeeping operation,” a senior Western diplomat said on the condition of anonymity.

    Another diplomat and a UN official confirmed the development. The official said the discussions would begin within days.

    United States (U.S.) Ambassador to the UN Susan Rice, had hinted of that possibility last week at a Security Council meeting.

    Other Council members are now warming to the idea, the diplomats and UN officials said.

    Deployment of a UN peacekeeping force would require the approval of the Security Council.

    Another option would be to send an African Union (AU) force mandated by the council with logistical and other support from the UN, similar to the AU’s Somalia mission.

    Washington favours a UN mission rather than an AU force, diplomats said.

    Details would have to be worked out but one idea that floated was for a UN peacekeeping force of some 3,000 to 5,000 troops, the diplomats said.

    They, however, noted that since the three-week-old conflict has not ended, it will be too early to deploy peacekeepers.

    “There’s no peace to keep yet. We’re still in the peace-enforcement phase,” said another diplomat.

    UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon had been uncomfortable with direct UN involvement in the proposed African-led operation, diplomats said. The UN top official felt such intervention would have been an offensive combat mission and not peacekeeping.

    But now that the French-backed Malian army has reclaimed most of the cities, the possibility of deploying UN peacekeepers has become less remote, the envoys said.

    They said a UN peacekeeping force would offer certain advantages over the African-led force approved by the Council last month.

    “Funding would be clear, it would be easier to monitor human rights compliance and the UN could choose which national contingents to use in the force,” they said.

    Many of the African troops that are already in Mali supporting the French and Malian forces, could theoretically remain and become part of a UN peacekeeping force, one diplomat said.

    It is an idea France would likely support.

    Prime Minister Jean-Marc Ayrault said on Tuesday that Paris would favour a quick deployment of international monitors to Mali to ensure human rights are not abused.

  • Painful price of peacekeeping

    Painful price of peacekeeping

    Four Nigerian peacekeepers were killed in Darfur recently, Yetunde Oladinde looks at the issues around the recent killings, the controversies in Sudan and more

    Peaceful community and nation is desired by all and sundry. But conflict is inevitable and this brings wars and war-torn zones to every part of the world. Peacemaking, peacekeeping and peace building are therefore very important concepts which experts have had to grapple with over the years.

    At the centre of all these are the personnel which include soldiers and the other volunteers who put in their best to bring about lasting peace. For every soldier, therefore, protecting the lives of others naturally comes first. So as peacekeepers, the urge to be their brother’s keeper is a sacrifice that has been made and they will continue to make.

    Unfortunately, the news of the death of four Nigerian soldiers belonging to the United Nations- African Union Peacekeeping Mission in Darfur during the week came as a big blow to many.

    “They were killed last night some 2km from our regional headquarters in El Geneina. They came under fire from all sides,” a spokesman for UNAMID said.

    It was not the first attack and there was outrage. About two months ago there were renewed fighting between the Sudanese government and rebels from the Darfur region’s Justice and Equality Movement (JEM).

    Both sides confirmed that there had been clashes, but gave conflicting versions of events. Sudan’s army said more than 50 rebels had been killed as they were driven out two areas of East Darfur, while the JEM said it had taken control of three towns near the Abu Jabra oilfield.

    Col Khalid Sawarmi from the Sudanese army then issued a statement saying that 50 of the rebels were killed in the clashes, and many others were wounded.

    He alleged that the remaining rebels had attacked the town of Tabun and fled in the direction of South Sudan after being pushed out of East Darfur state.

    But the rebels told a different story, alleging that they took Tabun and two other towns near the Abu Jabra oilfield.

    The oilfield is in the disputed region of South Kordofan, just over the state border from East Darfur. The apparent fighting in South Kordofan highlights the extent to which JEM operated outside its original Darfuri bases.

    The group recently signed an agreement with other Darfuri rebels as well as fighters from SPLM-North, which operate in the South Kordofan and Blue Nile border states.

    When South Sudan seceded from the north last year, rebels in those states found themselves stranded on the north side of the border in Sudan. Experts believe that the attacks were meant to intimidate and block the Mission as well as expel it from Darfur.

    They also described it as a criminal act and it was denounced by all the displaced. The leaders and displaced also blamed the government of Sudan and its militias for being behind the attack and of similar incidents involving UNAMID and other humanitarian organisations.

    While Nigerians, residents of Darfur and people from around the world condemned the attack, the big question on the lips of many, however, is would this crisis ever end?

    Interestingly, the peacekeeping troops have been in Darfur since 2007. Some 16,000 troops, mostly from African nations, are currently based in the region; 78 have died.

    War broke out in Darfur in 2003, when rebel groups took up arms against the central government. According to the United Nations, 300,000 people have died because of the war. The Sudanese government says 10,000 have died. A peace agreement was signed between the government and one rebel group in 2011, but three other rebel groups have refused to sign.

    UNAMID, the world’s largest peacekeeping mission, was deployed by the United Nations and the African Union in the arid western territory after fierce fighting in 2003 which forced hundreds of thousands of people to flee their homes.

    Violence in Darfur, where mostly non-Arab rebels took up arms against the government in Khartoum, has ebbed from a 2003-04 peak but international efforts to broker peace have failed to end the conflict.

    The International Criminal Court has issued arrest warrants for Sudan’s President Omar Hassan al-Bashir and other officials to face charges of masterminding atrocities in the region where Sudanese troops and allied Arab militias have sought to crush the rebellion. Sudan’s government has also signed a Qatar-sponsored peace deal with an umbrella organisation of smaller rebel groups last year, but the major factions refused to join.

    Most of the international peace operations are established and implemented by the United Nations itself, with troops serving under UN operational control. In these cases, peacekeepers remain members of their respective armed forces, and do not constitute an independent “UN army”, as the UN does not have such a force.

    Of course, there are also cases where direct UN involvement is not considered appropriate or feasible. Here, the Council may consider authorising regional organisations such as the North Atlantic Treaty Organisation (NATO) and the Economic Community of West African States to step and help secure peace.