Joint UN-AU peacekeeping force in Darfur still missing key capacities
NEW YORK, 8 October: The hybrid (fælles) UN-African Union peacekeeping operation (UNAMID) that will be fully deployed in the war-torn Darfur region of western Sudan in January has shortfalls in several key aviation and ground transport capacities, senior UN officials Monday, warning that the missions ability to carry out its basic work will be in jeopardy unless those gaps are quickly filled.
Under-Secretary-General for Peacekeeping Affairs Jean-Marie Guéhenno said that UNAMID is still lacking ground transport, light tactical helicopters and transport helicopters. – These capacities are vital… If we do not have the force enablers, I am concerned that the mission will be unable to deliver on the key aspects of its work, Mr. Guéhenno said.
He pointed to recent attacks on AU peacekeepers in Haskanita, where over a dozen people were killed and many more wounded before the South Darfur town was burned down, in underscoring the need for “troops that are very mobile with a capacity to dominate any situation.”
Noting that several European countries were stepping forward to provide resources for a separate peace mission (to be known as MINURCAT) in neighbouring Chad and the Central African Republic (CAR), he called for similar commitments to UNAMID.
– Otherwise it would be very dangerous if what is the most challenging situation – the situation in Darfur – did not have the right resources. That would put in jeopardy all our efforts to stabilize this region where there has been much too much suffering, he noted.
Since fighting between rebels, Government forces and allied Janjaweed militia broke out in 2003, an estimated 200.000 people have been killed and at least another 2,2 million forced to flee their homes. Some 4 million Darfurians now depend on humanitarian aid.
Mr. Guéhenno said he was concerned that the situation on the ground in Darfur has deteriorated in recent weeks, particularly in the south, where a base with the AU mission was overrun a week ago and many troops were killed.
He stressed it was also vital for there to be progress in implementing the comprehensive peace agreement (CPA) ending the separate north-south civil war in Sudan.
The Under-Secretary-General added that a technical team has been sent to the Sudanese capital, Khartoum, to finalize the deployment plan for UNAMID, which at full capacity should have more than 19.000 troops, over 6.000 police and 5.500 civilian staff.
So far the UN and the AU have agreed that Burkina Faso, Egypt, Ethiopia, Gambia, Ghana, Kenya, Malawi, Mali, Nigeria and Senegal are providing either an infantry battalion or a logistics, reconnaissance, transport, military police or sector reserve company to UNAMID, which is to have a predominantly African composition.
Bangladesh, Jordan, Nepal, the Netherlands, Thailand and the Nordic countries in Europe are also providing similar resources, as well as a field hospital.
Assistant Secretary-General Jane Holl Lute noted that the Sudanese Government has given assurance that Darfurs airstrips will be made available for the use of UNAMID so that it can be deployed.
But the mission does not yet have agreement for the land needed to facilitate the deployment of the heavy support package, a transition phase between the current AU mission and UNAMID.
– We have an engineering unit that is due by the end of this month that will depend on land being secured, Ms. Holl Lute said, adding:
– So we have a team on the ground in Nyala (the state capital of South Darfur) right now negotiating with the local government to ensure that we have a place for them to go.
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