PAKISTANI PEACEKEEPERS
MADE ‘SIGNIFICANT CONTRIBUTION’ TO PEACE PROCESS IN LIBERIA
UNITED NATIONS, With the United
Nations set to close its “successful” peacekeeping mission in Liberia by the
end of next month, the remaining unit of the Pakistani contingent a
well-equipped hospital is now winding up its operations after serving the
people of the West African country for some 15 years. The United Nations
Mission in Liberia (UNMIL) was deployed in 2003 to monitor a ceasefire
agreement in Liberia following the conclusion of a brutal civil war. At its
peak it consisted of up to 15,000 United Nations military personnel from and
1,115 police officers, along with a civilian component, from at least 10 troop
contributing countries.
Over the years, Pakistan, as
UNMIL’s backbone, provided infantry battalions, a signal company, engineering
companies, military observers, police officers as well as the Level-II hospital.
From 2005 to 2013, Pakistan contributed more than 2,000 peacekeepers to UNMIL
per annum, with a high of 3,400 in 2007 and 2008. The bulk of the Pakistani
troops returned home in 2015, with the medical unit remaining behind. “We
really have to acknowledge the significant contribution made by Pakistan to the
peace process in Liberia,” Waldemar Vrey, UNMIL’s deputy special
representative, said in an interview during which he commended the
professionalism and sense of dedication of the Pakistani personnel operating in
difficult conditions.
“They have been with us from the
beginning of the mission, particularly in the first difficult days of the
mission,” he said, noting that more than 20,000 Pakistani peacekeepers, both
military and police, have served in Liberia since 2003. “Not only that, I also
want to acknowledge that several of the Force Commanders who served in Liberia
were from Pakistan, and we have to acknowledge the good leadership that has
been displayed by the Pakistani generals over this period of time,” the
mission’s deputy chief said.
For a long period of time at
least up to 3,000 Pakistani troops were serving in Liberia per year. “And we
have to acknowledge the service and sacrifice of the Pakistani peacekeepers and
remember that 23 of them lost their lives serving under the UN flag in
Liberia.” The Pakistani peacekeepers, Vrey said, played a “crucial role” in the
implementation of the cease-fire agreement, as also in disarming of more than
100,000 former combatants during the first years of the mission.
“And since the disarmament
process, I can tell you that up to this day we have not had a significant
arms-in-circulation challenge in Liberia: a very good factor that makes peace
and security durable and makes it easier for us to depart as having achieved
our Security Council-mandated instructions.” The deputy chief of the mission
said, “We had peacekeepers on the ground from Pakistan from the beginning and
we have them right up to the end in the form of the Pakistani Military Hospital
that is still with us on the ground, and they will be the last military unit, leaving
us in Liberia. “They have been providing a very professional service to us:
expert doctors on the ground; very good equipment that Pakistan has made
available to us. They helped us deal with a lot of tropical diseases,
particularly malaria, and spare a thought for their contribution during the
dreadful period of Ebola epidemic as well.
They supported mission staff but
they also made a significant contribution to Liberians and played their part in
overcoming this catastrophe that was brought about by Ebola. So, certainly they
have played a critical role in (the) success of the mission in Liberia.” He
said that the Pakistani medical unit reached out to prisons and local
communities and children at schools.
“This is way beyond the call of
duty. We have to acknowledge that Pakistan through their medical contingent
also reached out as a Member State to Liberia in helping the Liberian people
with the peace that they experienced.” Lauding the work done by Pakistani
military engineers, he said they built and repaired bridges ensuring the
strategic mobility that opened up the whole of the hinterland and helping
outreach to all the communities.
“We also have to acknowledge that
Pakistani police also deployed in Liberia and made a significant contribution
with the mentoring and advisory support they provided over the years to the
Liberian national police.” Vrey added, “All this is in the spirit of the United
Nations, where Member States reach out to each other and support each other
during difficult times. And I’m sure this relationship that was built through
the United Nations would also be taken forward on a bilateral basis in the
future.”
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