Saturday, July 9, 2011

U.N. votes for South Sudan peacekeeping force (Reuters)

UNITED NATIONS (Reuters) ? The U.N. Security Council voted on Friday to establish a force of up to 7,000 peacekeepers for poor, conflict-ravaged but oil-producing South Sudan, which became independent after a referendum.

The unanimous action occurred six years after a 2005 peace deal ended years of war in Sudan, Africa's largest nation. But the vote also came amid growing fears about conflict in volatile border regions.

The new mission, called UNMISS, calls for up to 7,000 U.N. peacekeepers and an additional 900 civilian police for South Sudan.

"This is a strong signal of support to the new South Sudan," Germany's U.N. Ambassador Peter Wittig told reporters.

Wittig, who is U.N. Security Council president for July, said the significant size of the new mission was a "substantial contribution to the security challenges facing South Sudan."

But Khartoum has made clear it is against a continuing U.N. peacekeeping presence. That has raised concerns about what will happen to the strife-torn Southern Kordofan region and other areas when the U.N.'s existing UNMIS mandate ends Saturday.

Security Council members are working on a draft resolution to wind down UNMIS, a U.N. diplomat said late on Friday. Some delegations are keen to adopt the resolution as soon as possible, potentially over the weekend, the diplomat said.

The UNMIS mission, which monitors compliance with the 2005 north-south peace deal, had a mandate to run until the south's secession. South Sudan split away from the north on July 9 to create Africa's newest nation.

U.N. Secretary General Ban Ki-moon said a week ago that unless decided otherwise, U.N. peacekeepers will have to cease operations in the Southern Kordofan region as of July 9.

The "liquidation" of UNMIS will start Sunday, U.N.'s special envoy to Sudan, Haile Menkerios, said on Thursday.

About 3,000 peacekeepers will start packing up their duffel bags in preparation to depart, tents will be taken down and security equipment will be collected.

"That's a huge logistical task," said Michel Bonnardeaux, the spokesman for U.N. Department of Peacekeeping Operations.

Most of those troops are in South Kordofan, Blue Nile and Abyei, while a few are in Khartoum, Bonnardeaux said.

There had been calls to keep a peacekeeping presence in volatile areas in order to protect civilians.

"I have urged the Government of Sudan for technical and practical reasons for an extension of the mandate of the United Nations in Sudan, at least until the situation (in Southern Kordofan) calms down. We can not afford to have any gaps," Ban told journalists at Sudan's foreign ministry in Khartoum.

Susan Rice, the U.S. ambassador to the U.N., said in a speech Thursday that the U.S. was "extremely concerned by the government's decision to compel the departure of the U.N. mission in Sudan from Southern Kordofan and Blue Nile states and elsewhere in the North."

NEW MISSION

Leading the helm of South Sudan's UNMISS is Norwegian diplomat Hilde Johnson, who was most recently deputy director of the U.N. children's foundation UNICEF and is also author of a new book on Sudan, the U.N. announced on Friday.

The mandate to establish peacekeeping forces in South Sudan calls for reviews after three and six months to see whether conditions on the ground allow for a reduction of peacekeepers to 6,000.

A number of aid agencies have called on the United Nations to increase the number of troops to be deployed to South Sudan. Oxfam has argued that the country has little capacity to protect its own population despite its commitment to do so.

However, several countries have been challenging the U.N. Secretariat to produce evidence that as many as 7,000 troops are still needed, a Western diplomat said on Wednesday.

About 7,000 troops are already in South Sudan but working under the UNMIS mandate.

The U.N. has its biggest peacekeeping mandate in Darfur where, together with the African Union, it has a mandate for some 20,000 troops.

It is also deploying 4,200 Ethiopian troops in Abyei for a six-month period under a mission called UNISFA.

(Editing by Vicki Allen and Paul Simao)

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/un/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20110708/wl_nm/us_sudan_peacekeeping

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