COVID-19: International Day Of UN Peace Keepers
COVID-19 and
Peace Keeping
Theme: Communities
that participate in peace, create societies that benefit from healthy and
peaceful outcomes.
They had a
grand plan of saving
future generations from the scourge of war. It is a motivation
behind the creating the United Nations.
Having lived
through the devastation of two world wars, the founders had seen the
consequences of indecision too. Since its creation, the UN has often been
called upon to prevent disputes from escalating into war, or to help restore
peace following the outbreak of armed conflict, and to promote lasting peace in
societies emerging from wars. But, then COVID-19 is threatening to reverse all
the achievements. So communities need to participate in following COVID-19
pandemic response restrictions. The states have to ensure they are providing
all necessary anti-COVID-19 protection.
For all of
us to successfully engage in Anti COVID-19 response we need to participate in
mechanisms entrenching conflict prevention; preventive diplomacy; preventive
dis-armament; preventing violence, genocide and a responsibility to protect;
peace-keeping; peace-building. However, we must have specially trained
personnel to do this. This is why amidst this COVID-19, we must set aside time
to acknowledge the UN Peace Keepers for the commendable work they do. According
to their website they engage in the following in order for the world to be a
more peaceful place.
Conflict
Prevention
The main
strategies to prevent disputes from escalating into conflict, and to prevent
the recurrence of conflict, are preventive diplomacy and preventive
disarmament. Preventive diplomacy refers to action taken to prevent disputes
from arising or escalating into conflicts, and to limit the spread of conflicts
as they arise. It may take the form of mediation, conciliation or negotiation.
Preventive diplomacy
Early
warning is an essential component of prevention, and the United Nations
carefully monitors developments around the world to detect threats to
international peace and security, thereby enabling the Security Council and the
Secretary-General to carry out preventive action. Envoys and special
representatives of the Secretary-General are engaged in mediation and preventive diplomacy throughout
the world. In some trouble spots, the mere presence of a skilled envoy can
prevent the escalation of tension. These envoys often cooperate with regional
organizations.
Preventive
disarmament
Complementing
preventive diplomacy is preventive disarmament, which seeks to reduce the
number of small arms in conflict-prone regions. In El Salvador, Liberia, Sierra
Leone, Timor-Leste and elsewhere, this has entailed demobilizing combat forces,
as well as collecting and destroying their weapons as part of an overall peace
agreement. Destroying yesterday’s weapons prevents their use in tomorrow’s
wars.
Preventing
Genocide and Responsibility to Protect
Prevention
requires apportioning responsibility and promoting collaboration between the
concerned States and the international community. The duty to prevent and halt
genocide and mass atrocities lies first and foremost with the State, but the
international community has a role that cannot be blocked by the invocation of
sovereignty. Sovereignty no longer exclusively protects States from foreign
interference; it is a charge of responsibility where States are accountable for
the welfare of their people. This principle is enshrined in article 1 of
the Genocide
Convention and embodied in the principle of “sovereignty as
responsibility” and in the concept of the Responsibility to Protect.
The Special Adviser on the
Prevention of Genocide acts as a catalyst to raise awareness of
the causes and dynamics of genocide, to alert relevant actors where there is a
risk of genocide, and to advocate and mobilize for appropriate action.
The Special Adviser on the Responsibility to Protect leads the
conceptual, political, institutional and operational development of the
Responsibility to Protect. The efforts of their Office include alerting
relevant actors to the risk of genocide, war crimes, ethnic cleansing and
crimes against humanity, enhancing the capacity of the United Nations to
prevent these crimes, including their incitement.
Peacekeeping
United Nations peacekeeping operations are
a vital instrument employed by the international community to advance peace and
security.
The first UN
peacekeeping mission was established in 1948 when the Security Council
authorized the deployment of the United Nations Truce Supervision
Organization (UNTSO) to the Middle East to monitor the
Armistice Agreement between Israel and its Arab neighbours. Since then, there
have been more than 70 UN peacekeeping operations around the world.
Over 70
years, UN peacekeeping has evolved to meet the demands of different conflicts
and a changing political landscape. Born at the time when Cold War rivalries
frequently paralyzed the Security Council, UN peacekeeping goals were primarily
limited to maintaining ceasefires and stabilizing situations on the ground, so
that efforts could be made at the political level to resolve the conflict by
peaceful means.
Within the
United Nations, peacebuilding refers
to efforts to assist countries and regions in their transitions from war to
peace and to reduce a country's risk of lapsing or relapsing into conflict by
strengthening national capacities for conflict management, and laying the foundations
for sustainable peace and development.
Building
lasting peace in war-torn societies is a daunting challenge for global peace
and security. Peace building requires sustained international support for
national efforts across the broadest range of activities. For instance,
peace builders monitor ceasefires, demobilize and reintegrate combatants, assist
the return of refugees and displaced persons, help to organize and monitor
elections of a new government, support justice and security sector reforms,
enhance human rights protections, and foster reconciliation after past
atrocities.
Peacebuilding
involves action by a wide array of organizations of the UN system, including
the World Bank, regional economic commissions, NGOs and local citizens’ groups.
Peacebuilding has played a prominent role in UN operations in
Bosnia and Herzegovina, Cambodia, El Salvador, Guatemala, Kosovo, Liberia and
Mozambique, as well as more recently in Afghanistan, Burundi, Iraq, Sierra
Leone and Timor-Leste. An example of inter-state peacebuilding has been the UN
Mission in Ethiopia and Eritrea. Even as we battle with COVID-19, it is
pacifying to know that an institution like the UN is still able to go on with
all the work they do. Meanwhile communities should go ahead and that participate
in all necessary activities to prevent COVID-19 transmission. This alone is a
peace activity. It in turn creates societies that are able to prevent COVID-19,
benefit from healthy and peaceful outcomes.
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