Preparations for an expanded UN role in Burundi have begun, with Secretary-General Kofi Annan proposing that the African Unions Mission in Burundi (AMIB) and the existing UN Office in Burundi would form the core of the military and civilian components, respectively, of a UN peacekeeping mission in the country, UN News reported on Monday.
It is my intention to immediately begin planning and preparations for a United Nations peacekeeping mission, Annan was quoted as saying in a letter to the president of the UN Security Council released on Monday.
UN News reported that in March, Annan recommended in a report that the Council should expand the UNs role in Burundi in order to provide the support necessary for consolidating the peace process, which began with the signing in 2000 of the Arusha Peace and Reconciliation Accord.
In response to Annans letter, Council President Gunter Pleuger of Germany approved the proposal, noting that it will be carried out without prejudice to a future decision on establishing a UN force in Burundi, UN News reported.
AMIB has 2,523 troops in Burundi drawn from Ethiopia, Mozambique and South Africa. They were deployed to monitor the countrys peace process following a decade of civil strife, which has claimed the lives of at least 250,000 people.
On 25 March, the African Union (AU) announced it had renewed for another month AMIBs mandate, and appealed to the UN Security Council to authorise the early deployment of UN troops as proposed by Annan.
The AU said it had renewed AMIBs mandate from 2 April to 2 May on the understanding that the UN Security Council would deploy peacekeepers before the end of this period.
Kilde: IRIN News (FN)