United Nations peacekeepers have countless stories of voluntary assistance to local people in their areas of responsibility, either by ad hoc contacts or answering calls for help, or through efforts to contribute to societies in need. Often it is these acts of support, bolstered by the proximity of military equipment and field skills, which can make the difference in a population’s attitude toward peacekeepers. Stories from the field, in Eritrea and Ethiopia, and Timor-Leste, show how.
UNMEE troops take time to help
The United Nations Mission in Ethiopia and Eritrea (UNMEE) is mandated with monitoring the temporary security zone between the two countries, and with assisting in the implementation of the peace agreement. It has also provided logistical support to the Eritrea-Ethiopia Boundary Commission, which was to delineate changes to the border, over which the countries fought between 1998 and 2000. The Commission has begun publishing its decisions on the border, which remain controversial in some locales. A classical peacekeeping mission, as of 1 May 2003, UNMEE has deployed 4,080 troops, 229 international and 259 local civilian staff who are to ensure the parties remain at peace and that the local populations in the affected areas.
Born out of Badme On a quiet December evening, UN military observers (UNMOs) were winding down after the day’s patrols, when the village silence was broken by the sound of a woman’s voice. A nurse from the Badme Village Clinic had come worried that a patient in labour was in danger, after 18 hours trying to give birth to her first child. The UNMOs immediately began medical evacuation procedures: approval was obtained from local authorities and a convoy of UN vehicles with patient, husband and nurse inside along with officers from Zambia, Jordan and Rumania took off for the hospital, an hour’s drive away. As the convoy crossed Sembel village, just after midnight, loud screams emerged from one of the vehicles. These soon mingled with the cries of a newborn baby.
After the nurse assured the UNMOs that both mother and baby were in good health, the group returned to Badme, arriving at the family home at 2:30 a.m. where a crowd of relatives and neighbours welcomed the convoy. Major Valentin Pacuraar, in whose car the baby was born, recalled: “I was in the middle of the event. Everybody surrounded us with warmth and kindness… I’m thrilled even now.” Grenade victim saved On 1 February, UN military observers based in Shilalo, Eritrea, had just returned from a long patrol when a Jordanian officer rushed in with news of a bad incident: two brothers, Teklehaimande Mahari Baire and Weldezgi Mahari Baire aged 13 and 11, had accidentally detonated an Unexploded Ordinance (UXO) believed to be a rocket-propelled grenade in a nearby village. Their condition was critical. Major Freddy Skjenken from Norway and Captain Danilo Lorusso from Italy grabbed their first aid kits and rushed to the scene, only to find that Teklehaimande had died. Weldezgi Mahari Baire was alive but in critical condition. With no medical assistance available in the area, the two UNMOs began providing life saving first aid to the young boy who had multiple splinter injuries on his upper body and genital area and was bleeding profusely. The two UNMOs were well trained in emergency first aid, with Major Skjenken having served in a medical unit during the Gulf War. A crowd of locals gathered, pressing in on the rescue operation. The UNMOs managed to stop the bleeding and attach intravenous fluids, but they realized this was a stopgap, as internal hemorrhaging was continuing. Within minutes, a UN helicopter was airborne en route to the Jordanian Battalion hospital in Asmara, where the boy was declared out of danger a few days later. Peacekeepers rehabilitate village school The small farming community of Semema in the Northern Tigray
region of Ethiopia, like its neighbors, lacks the basic infrastructure
to support its population. Before UNMEE intervened, the 1,200 primary
students went to school in a building without classrooms, windows or desks.
Peacekeeping in Timor-Leste: Patrolling and playing — all in a day’s work The most popular cultural event during Timor-Leste’s recent
and first book fair in Dili was a display of the Afro-Brazilian martial
art form capoeira by a group of young Timorese children. Twelve
girls and boys aged between 9 and 14 years old choreographed a dance in
combination with capoeira to a soundtrack of drums and singing.
The performance was made possible by UN peacekeepers in Timor-Leste, in
this case by Private Jesus from the Brazilian Platoon of the Peacekeeping
Force (PKF) that is part of the UN Mission of Support in East Timor (UNMISET).
Whenever Private Jesus can take a break from his duties, anything from
manning vehicle checkpoints to crowd control, he runs capoeira
classes for young Timorese. DPI 2311 (12) - May 2003 |