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Nations asked for gear,
troops
By David R. Sands
May 18, 2006 -(THE WASHINGTON TIMES) The
head of the United Nations peacekeeping arm said yesterday that
he has begun contacting nations to field and equip a major deployment
in Sudan's troubled Darfur region but said the mission will need
clear support from Sudan's government if it is to succeed.
Jean-Marie Guehenno, U.N. undersecretary-general of peacekeeping
operations, said in an interview that he hoped to see contributions
from both developed and developing countries for the proposed Darfur
mission, which will be much larger and have a far more extensive
mandate than the hard-pressed 7,000-member African Union (AU) force
now in the region.
"But the key now is for us to get the Sudan government fully
on board," Mr. Guehenno said during a Washington visit.
"There is an international strategic consensus developing,
but we truly require the strategic cooperation of the Sudanese government
to make it successful."
The U.N. Security Council Tuesday approved a resolution calling
on Khartoum to drop its objections to the U.N. peacekeeping mission.
The western region of Sudan has been the scene of a brutal three-year
civil war in which fighting against two local rebel groups has left
nearly 200,000 dead and millions homeless.
The underfunded AU force has been unable to quell the violence,
and Sudanese officials have sent mixed signals about a U.N. replacement
force since signing a peace deal May 5 with the larger of the Darfur
rebel movements.
Mr. Guehenno said a U.N. mission with broad international participation
would "ease the political process" by assuring both the
government and the rebels that no country or group of countries
with an agenda was dominating the force.
But he added that no nation was willing to commit troops or resources
to the force until the scope and size of the Darfur mission become
clearer. He also said the AU force must be given greater resources
until it can be relieved.
The Darfur deployment would be the most high-profile and politically
sensitive new assignment for the U.N. peacekeeping agency since
it was rocked by revelations of sexual misconduct by its troops
in the Democratic Republic of the Congo and other missions.
He said the willingness of the United States and Western allies
to turn to the peacekeeping agency for Darfur was "a vote of
confidence, in its way," in the continuing usefulness of the
U.N. peacekeeping force despite the sex scandal.
Mr. Guehenno said his agency had made good progress in implementing
many of the reforms recommended in a critical March 2005 report
on U.N. peacekeeping missions, which deploys 90,000 troops in 18
countries at an annual cost of $5 billion.
But he said better training and oversight of peacekeeping units
would not address the root cause of the problem: the unwillingness
of U.N. states to provide the money and other support for the missions
they approve.
"The U.N. as a peacekeeper is a bargain, but if you try to
do too much on the cheap, you run a great risk," he said. "If
you cut corners, it eventually comes back to hit you."
From: http://www.washingtontimes.com/world/20060517-100826-5922r.htm
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