UN repatriates Nigerian peacekeepers over poor performance

0
814

Nigeria contigent

ALTHOUGH Nigeria is one of the top five United Nations (UN) troops’ contributors, some of the contingents sent by the Federal Government for UN peacekeeping have performed below expectation, and have had to be returned to the country. The Joint African Union-United Nations Special Representative and Head of the UN Mission in Darfur (UNAMID), Prof. Ibrahim Gambari, described the development as a sad experience. 
He lamented that there were some of the deployments sent to the UN “including sadly from the Nigerian contingent, which have not really performed up to par.”
He added: “Fortunately, the Nigerian government has really addressed the issue. They repatriated the battalion and are preparing to send new ones.”
Gambari, a former Nigerian Foreign Affairs Minister and Permanent Representative to the UN, spoke in an exclusive interview published yesterday by the United Nations News Centre.
When asked to highlight some of the challenges of the UNAMID, the UN mission to Darfur, whose mandate was recently renewed by the UN Security Council, he said part of the challenge   was making “sure that all the top contributor countries do three things,” including ascertaining the quality of the troops they send to the UN.

 Listing those things, Gambari
said: “One is to ensure that the quality and quantity of contingents’ equipment
are up to par. Second, that the pre-deployment training they give to them is
adequate, thorough and rigorous, and, thirdly, that the selection of the people
whom they actually send is also of the topmost quality and that they operate
much more cohesively.”

Gambari is considered a
diplomatic elder statesman in the UN system and has held other top UN
posts including being the Special Adviser on Africa and the head of the UN
Department of Political Affairs. On several occasions, both the current and
immediate past Secretary-General have described him as among their best
advisers.
UNAMID which Gambari currently
leads on behalf of both the AU and the UN, is the largest peacekeeping
mission in existence worldwide, with 26,000 personnel.
Source: Guardian 

LEAVE A REPLY

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.