DARFUR PEACEKEEPING FORCE HEADED FOR MAJOR DRAW-DOWN.
The African Union and the United
Nations are proposing major cuts to their joint peacekeeping force in Sudan's
troubled Darfur region, paring down one of the world's largest and costliest
peace operations.
A joint report sent to the UN
Security Council last month recommends that the ceiling set for military troops
be cut by 44 percent and the maximum number of police reduced by 30 percent in
the UNAMID force. The Security Council is expected to discuss the proposals
next week.
The cuts to the 17,000-strong
UNAMID force would result in major savings to the UN peacekeeping budget at a
time when the United States is seeking to reduce its financial contribution to
the blue helmets.
UNAMID has a budget of $1.04
billion per year, making it one of the UN's costliest missions along with the
UN force in the Democratic Republic of Congo.
Under the proposal outlined in a
strategic review of the UNAMID force, the troop level would drop to 8,735 and
the police strength would stand at 2,360. The drawdown would be carried out in
two six-month phases.
The report cited an
"improvement in the security situation" as a result of the Khartoum
government's offensive against rebel groups in Darfur, which are now confined
to parts of western Jebel Marra.
Darfur has been engulfed in
conflict since 2003, when ethnic minority insurgents mounted a rebellion
against President Omar al-Bashir, complaining that his Arab-dominated
government was marginalizing the region.
Bashir launched a brutal
counter-insurgency, and the United Nations says that at least 300,000 people
have been killed in the conflict and another 2.5 million have been forced to
flee their homes.
The UN-AU joint mission
"should adjust to the new realities in Darfur and the Sudan," said
the report from UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres and African Commission
chair Moussa Faki Mahamat.
The peacekeepers would withdraw
from several sectors in Darfur and concentrate the mission's main military
effort on Jebel Marra, said the report dated May 18.
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