Wednesday 17 April 2013

Mali and the international community


Mali is still in crisis. The Northern territories are far from being secured and the political situation in the capital and throughout the country is very unstable.  The Dialogue and Reconciliation Commission formally adopted on 6 March 2013 is yet to start working. Many of its Commissioners have not yet been appointed. The UN peace-keeping operation is at the design stage. The Security Council resolution that will approve the mission, under the very strange name of United Nations Multidimensional Integrated Stabilization Mission in Mali (MINUSMA) – multidimensional needs not to be in the name, if it is an integrated mission – has been drafted but has not yet been finalised. In any case, if it were approved in the next weeks it will take several months to have the peacekeeping forces fully operational. On the other hand, the EU presence that is supposed to train the new Malian military and security personnel is just beginning its deployment.
In view of all this, the elections scheduled for July 2013 – presidential elections on 7 July 2013 and legislative elections on 21 July 2013 – seem pretty premature. I do not see the necessary minimum conditions being in place by July for peaceful and credible elections to take place. Therefore, I can’t understand the reasoning of the key Northern partners of Mali that continue to insist that this calendar should be abided by. 

4 comments:

Anonymous said...

Thanks for your insights. I agree with you that holding elections in July seems premature. In an integrated mission such as MINUSMA, how large will its Human Rights Component be? The draft resolution creating MINUSMA mentions inter alia "deployment of human rights observers all throughout the country." In your estimate, how many personnel will focus on the human rights part of the mandate? Thank you.

Victor ANGELO said...

Thanks for the comment.
On the Human Rights issue, again, the ambition seems too vast. To achieve this part of the mandate, the HR section will have to combine about a dozen HR Officers with a large number of HR UN Volunteers, at least twenty of them. This is of course a rough estimate. Regards, VA

Anonymous said...

Thank you, sir, for your reply. Looking forward to reading more of your insights re peacekeeping issues. Regards, Noel

Allison said...

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