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Le Canada et l’ONU > Newton Bowles Reports Ce document est disponible seulement en anglais.
Pax, Praxis Surprise. I have written of the decline and fall of UN peacekeeping, from 78,000 in 1994 to 14,000 in 17 operations in 1999. But look what is happening-- 4,700 police in Kosovo, 11,000 peacekeepers in Sierra Leone, nearly 11,000 (troops and police) in East Timor, and who knows what (another 5,500?) in DR Congo. In addition there are several hundred UN civilian staff engaged in peace building but not counted as peacekeepers because they are on loan from the Secretariat. By any reckoning, the year 2000 count of UN peacekeepers will top 30,000. UN Peacekeeping operations on 1 February 2000 are shown in Annex 4. The relative shift to police and other civilian functions is an encouraging sign of the functional advance from cease-fire to nation building. East Timor is the latest demonstration of the need for a UN Rapid Reaction Capacity, something Canada has been advocating for five years. In a January 2000 report to the General Assembly, the Secretary-General points out that the HQ coordination, which I have just outlined, is extended to countries: his personal Representative in such situations has overall authority for the entire peace building operation. Concluding the report, he says, UN peacekeeping will continue to be critical in maintaining peace. He goes on to say: "The present moment represents a historic opportunity to make full use of and further enhance [the UN's] demonstrated capacity." |