Showing posts with label United Nations Disengagement Force. Show all posts
Showing posts with label United Nations Disengagement Force. Show all posts
Wednesday, December 18, 2013
Filipino peacekeepers get United Nations Service Medal
The Armed Forces of the Philippines (AFP) formally awarded the United Nations Service Medal to the 332-strong 6th Philippine Contingent to Golan Heights Wednesday.
The latter were warmly congratulated and feted by AFP chief-of-staff Gen. Emmanuel T. Bautista for accomplishing their mission despite constant threats on their safety.
The 6th Philippine Contingent to Golan Heights was headed by Lt. Col. Nolie L. Anquillano.
The Filipino troopers completed their one-year deployment despite receiving worldwide attention with two incidents of being held in captivity by Syrian rebels in March and in May this year.
Despite being released safely on both occasions, questions on their immediate pull-out were raised.
The Philippine government continued the all-Philippine Army contingent’s deployment after the UN agreed to bolster the safety of the UN peacekeeping force.
Meanwhile, the 115-strong 17th Philippine Contingent to Liberia (PCL), which was deployed in July last year, completed their mission of assisting in the maintenance of law and order in the country following a ceasefire that ended the Second Liberian Civil War.
The all-Philippine Air Force contingent was led by its contingent commander, Col. Fidel Igmedio T. Cruz Jr.
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Sunday, March 10, 2013
Filipino UN peacekeepers seized in Syria arrive safe in Amman
The United Nations welcomed the release on Saturday of 21 Filipino peacekeepers, who had been seized by Syrian rebels on the Golan Heights, as they crossed to freedom in Jordan after a three-day ordeal.
Philippine authorities also expressed relief at the release of the members of the UN Disengagement Observer Force (UNDOF).
A Jordanian military official said the peacekeepers were greeted by border guards as they crossed from Syria in the afternoon and "underwent medical examinations."
They then boarded an army bus and were given a military escort to the east Amman headquarters of the armed forces where they were "handed over to the UN representative in Jordan, Costanza Farina, in the presence of the Philippines ambassador," the official added in a statement.
An AFP correspondent said the peacekeepers were also greeted by Jordanian Foreign Minister Nasser Judeh, government spokesman Samih Maaytah and Chief of Staff Mashaal al-Zebn.
The peacekeepers are members of the UNDOF monitoring the armistice line between Syria and Israel that followed the 1973 Arab-Israeli war.
A video footage reportedly released by rebels who handed over the peacekeepers and posted by SITE Monitoring Service shows the soldiers in blue UN helmets and vests shaking hands with insurgents as they cross a small stream to Jordan.
The footage shows a man describing the event as a cameraman films the peacekeepers who are seen standing by a truck.
"The UN observers are now in Jordanian territory. They were taken to the Jordan border and given to Jordanian authorities...," the man is heard saying.
The Filipinos were seized by rebels Wednesday near the armistice line in the first abduction of its kind since the the start of an uprising against Syrian President Bashar al-Assad two years ago.
UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon "appreciates the efforts of all concerned to secure their safe release," his office in New York said after the Filipinos crossed over from Syria.
"The secretary general emphasizes to all parties the impartiality of United Nations peacekeepers," it added.
The Philippine military spokesman told AFP no decision had been taken about where the peacekeepers would go next but that Manila's envoy to Amman "will be directly coordinating with the Jordanian authorities for their turnover to us."
"The Filipino UN peacekeeping contingent's (to the Golan Heights) commander, Colonel Cirilito Sobejana, is now on his way to Jordan to meet his men," said Manila Colonel Arnulfo Burgos.
Ambassador Olivia V Palala told AFP all the men were "safe and sound" and that future plans for them would be made in coordination with the United Nations.
Judeh said he spoke to Ban by telephone "to reassure him about the safety of the peacekeepers," adding that "Jordan will provide them with all the assistance they need."
The peacekeepers were abducted by rebels from the Yarmuk Martyrs Brigade in Jamla village just a mile to the Syrian side of the armistice line.
The rebels had made conditions for their release, namely that Syrian troops move 20 kilometres (12 miles) back from Jamla.
They also demanded that the International Committee of the Red Cross "guarantees the safe exit from the strife-torn area of Jamla of civilians," said the head of the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, Rami Abdel Rahman.
On Friday a UN attempt to pick up the peacekeepers was aborted when Syrian troops shelled the area.
Syria denied the shelling and the foreign ministry sent letters to Ban and the UN Security Council on Saturday "condemning attacks by terrorist groups against UN forces and residents" near the armistice line, state news agency SANA said.
It also called on the UN to "clearly condemn terrorist groups" -- the term used by the regime to describe the rebels, the official Syrian news agency added.
The abduction was condemned by world powers and triggered a flurry of diplomatic action to secure the peacekeepers' release.
It also sparked fears that more governments would withdraw their contingents from the already depleted UN mission.
Israel warned that any further reduction in UNDOF strength risked creating a security vacuum in the no-man's land between the two sides on the strategic Golan plateau, which it seized in the 1967 Six-Day War.
Meanwhile on Saturday, Syrian troops bombarded several rebel-held areas near Damascus, where 10 people, including three children, were killed in clashes between troops and rebels, the Observatory said.
At least 49 people were killed across Syria on Saturday, the Observatory added.
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Musa Hattar | AFP News | March 10, 2013 | Article Link
Friday, March 08, 2013
Kidnapped peacekeepers to be freed in coming hours
Rebel commander tells BBC abduction of 21 Filipino soldiers near border with Golan was a mistake
The 21 UN peacekeepers from the Philippines who were kidnapped by Syrian rebels Wednesday will be released on Thursday, a high-ranking rebel commander said.
The commander told BBC Arabic that the abduction of the peacekeepers was a mistake and that they would be freed in the coming hours.
Video emerged Thursday afternoon showing the peacekeepers saying that they were being treated well.
One video shows three men are dressed in camouflage and blue bullet-proof vests emblazoned with the UN and “Philippines.”
One of the men says in English says they “are safe and the Free Syrian Army are treating us good.”
The other video shows six peacekeepers sitting in a room, and one of them says they are safe.
The Philippine government said earlier Thursday that talks were under way for the release of the 21 unarmed peacekeepers, who were kidnapped by Syrian rebels in the Golan Heights in the increasingly volatile zone separating Israeli and Syrian troops.
Foreign Affairs Department spokesman Raul Hernandez said the peacekeepers, who were detained on Wednesday, were unharmed and were being treated as “visitors and guests.”
Hernandez told reporters in Manila that the UN force commander in the area was negotiating with the leader of the rebel group, whose demands concerned the positioning of Syrian government forces in the area. He said there was no deadline for the negotiations.
Philippine President Benigno Aquino III said earlier Thursday that the UN force commander told him to expect the peacekeepers to be released within 24 hours, with negotiations progressing well. The UN Security Council demanded their immediate and unconditional release.
The country’s president, Benigno Aquino III, said earlier that he was told to expect the peacekeepers to be released within 24 hours, with negotiations progressing. Hernandez said the rebel group’s demands concerned the positioning of Syrian government forces in the area, and that there was no deadline for the negotiations.
The peacekeepers were kidnapped Wednesday by a group of Syrian rebels near the Golan Heights town of Jamla.
“They were in a military convoy doing their run. They were suddenly held at one Syrian rebel outpost. They were allowed to go through the first outpost but were stopped at the second outpost,” said Philippine military spokesman Col. Arnulfo Marcelo Burgos.
A video clip released by the rebels shows a number of gunmen standing alongside the UN vehicles, while their apparent leader announced his demands. Some of the United Nations employees can be seen inside the vehicles.
In a second video, the same rebel spokesman is seen accusing the UN, the Assad regime and Europe of “collaborating with Israel.”
“The Free Syrian army will remain here until we banish Bashar and his oppression,” one rebel is seen saying.
The video accuses the peacekeepers of assisting the Syrian regime to redeploy in an area near the Golan that the fighters seized a few days ago in battles that left 11 fighters and 19 regime forces dead.
A man identified as Abu Qaed al-Faleh, spokesman for the Martyrs of Yarmouk Brigades, announced the group is holding the peacekeepers until Syrian President Bashar Assad’s forces withdraw from Jamla.
The UN Security Council strongly condemned the kidnapping and demanded the immediate and unconditional release of the peacekeepers.
Russia’s UN Ambassador Vitaly Churkin, the council president, told reporters that armed groups had been threatening the unarmed peacekeepers. He said talks were under way between UN officials and the captors.
Churkin said the capture of the peacekeepers “is particularly unacceptable and bizarre (because) UNDOF are unarmed and they have nothing to do with the situation in Syria.”
“They are there on a completely different mission so there is no reason at all under any circumstances, any kind of sick imagination to try to harm those people,” he said.
Churkin urged countries with influence on the Syrian opposition to use it to help free the peacekeepers. He did not name any countries but Qatar, Saudi Arabia and Turkey are known to have been providing military aid to some Syrian rebel groups.
UN deputy spokesman Eduardo del Buey said the UN observers were on a regular supply mission when they were stopped near an observation post and detained by some 30 gunmen.
Croatia announced last week that it would withdraw some 100 peacekeeping troops from the Syria-Israel border due to fears in the Croatian government that its troops could become targets for Syrian government soldiers.
Last month, UN staffer Carl Campeau went missing in the Syrian Golan Heights, sources familiar with the case told The Times of Israel.
Campeau, a Canadian legal adviser, was stationed at the United Nations Disengagement Observer Force base on the Syrian side of the demilitarized zone. Attempts by The Times of Israel to contact Campeau on his cellphone and at his office were unsuccessful.
Last week, The Times of Israel quoted a rebel activist reporting that Assad’s army had fled the Golan Heights area bordering Israel, and that rebel forces were in control there.
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Times of Israel/AP | March 7, 2013 | Article Link
Thursday, March 07, 2013
Syria rebels seize Filipino UN peacekeepers in Golan Heights
1st Philippine Peacekeeping Contingent to the Golan Heights. (file/Elmer Cato/DFA) |
UNITED NATIONS -- (UPDATE 2 - 11:18 a.m.) Syrian rebels on Wednesday abducted more than 20 Filipino UN peacekeepers in the Golan Heights ceasefire zone pushing back the frontier of their war with President Bashar al-Assad.
The United Nations said it is trying to negotiate the release of the soldiers. But a spokesman for the rebels said in a video that the UN troops would be held until Assad's forces pull back from a village in the Golan.
In Manila, Armed Forces of the Philippines spokesman Colonel Arnulfo Burgos Jr. confirmed the abduction and said the captive soldiers, whow ere seized Wednesday night, Philippines time, are "all well."
He said the seized troops, who include officers, are among the 300-strong contingent sent by the AFP November last year.
About 30 armed fighters stopped a UN Disengagement Force (UNDOF) convoy in the ceasefire zone, where the UN has had peacekeepers monitoring a ceasefire between Syria and Israel since 1974, UN deputy spokesman Eduardo del Buey told reporters.
"The UN observers were on a regular supply mission and were stopped near Observation Post 58, which had sustained damage and was evacuated this past weekend following heavy combat in close proximity, at Al Jamlah," he added.
There has been fierce fighting around Jamlah village, which is held by opposition forces.
The UN Security Council released a statement which said "armed elements of the Syrian opposition" had abducted the group of more than 20 peacekeepers and demanded their "unconditional and immediate" release.
"Negotiations are going on and the matter is mobilizing all our teams," UN peacekeeping chief Herve Ladsous told reporters after briefing the Security Council on the abduction. "It is a very serious incident."
Russia's UN ambassador Vitaly Churkin, who read the Security Council statement, said the rebels have made demands directed at the Syrian government but did not give details. "We hope they are going be released immediately," Churkin told reporters.
Syrian rebels are also believed to be holding an UNDOF staffer who was seized last month. The staffer is from Canada, according to diplomats.
UN diplomats and the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights director Rami Abdel Rahman said the peacekeepers were from the Philippines.
Rahman released two videos in which a rebel group, the Yarmuk Martyrs Brigade, set out their demands for the release of the peacekeepers.
In one, a man identified as Abu Kaid al-Faleh, a spokesman for the brigade, said the peacekeepers would not be freed until Syrian government forces pull back from the area.
"We call on them to withdraw all their troops to their bases. If they do not withdraw, these men (UN troops) will be treated as prisoners," he said.
In a second video, the same spokesman accused the UNDOF of working with the army to try to suppress the insurgency and help regime forces enter Jamlah.
"The Syrian regime, the UN and the European countries are all collaborators with Israel," he said.
The United Nations has reported a growing number of incidents in the Golan zone over the past year. It has already reinforced security for the peacekeepers by sending extra armored vehicles and communications equipment.
Shells from the Syrian side have landed in the ceasefire zone and on Israeli territory. Syrian government tanks have entered the zone several times, according to the UN.
Up to the end of February there were about 1,000 troops from Austria, Croatia, India and the Philippines operating in the ceasefire force.
But Croatia announced last week that it is withdrawing its 100 troops from UNDOF. The Croatian government said it feared for the soldiers' safety after reports that Saudi Arabia had bought arms from Croatia and then provided them to the Syrian rebels.
Canada and Japan have also withdrawn their small contingents in recent months because of security fears.
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Agence France-Presse | March 7, 2013 | Article Link
Thursday, May 31, 2012
22 Filipino peacekeepers gave their lives to world peace
MANILA -- Since the Philippines started sending peacekeepers to
United Nations missions in 1963, twenty-two Filipinos have given their
lives to the cause of world peace. And on International UN Peacekeepers
Day, the country paid tribute to those who have died and those who
continue to risk life and limb in war-torn places around the world.
At the celebration in the Department of Foreign Affairs Wednesday,
Secretary Albert del Rosario particularly remembered two Filipino
peacekeepers who were among 112 men and women who “died in the line of
duty last year as a result of acts of violence, accidents, and disease.”
They are Joseph Ubaldo of the UN Stabilization Mission in Haiti
(MINUSTAH) and Charles Uy of the UN Organization Stabilization Mission
in the Democratic Republic of the Congo (MONUSCO).
At a wreath-laying ceremony at UN headquarters in New York, UN
Secretary General Ban Ki-moon said: “Today we honor the 112 fallen
heroes who died while serving under the United Nations flag in 2011.”
“They may be soldiers, police or national staff. But there are no differences among them in terms of the risks they faced, the contributions they made, and the pride they took in their service to the United Nations,” the UN chief said.
“They may be soldiers, police or national staff. But there are no differences among them in terms of the risks they faced, the contributions they made, and the pride they took in their service to the United Nations,” the UN chief said.
“The difference between an ordinary person and a hero is that the hero voluntarily braves danger to save others,” he added.
Filipina peacekeepers in Arab Spring
Among the most notable Philippine contingents was that led by Army
Col. Cornelio Valencia Jr. Together with the UN Disengagement Observers’
Force (UNDOF), his team of 49 officers and 278 enlisted personnel,
mostly drawn from the 76th Infantry Battalion in Southern
Quezon, faced the Arab Spring protesters. Significantly, this contingent
to the male-dominant region had the most number of women. Of the 28
Filipino women peacekeepers, six were officers.
At present, the Philippines has 922 military and police personnel
serving as military observers, staff officers, police officers and
members of formed contingents in Cote d’Ivoire, Darfur, the Golan
Heights, Haiti, Kashmir, Liberia, South Sudan and Timor-Leste, the DFA
said.
Other than the contingents to Liberia, Golan Heights, and Haiti, the
AFP is also sending observers to the UN Military Observer Group in India
and Pakistan (UNMOGIP), UN Mission in Sudan (UNMIS), UN Integrated
Mission in Timor-Leste (UNMIT), and UN Operation in Cote d'Ivoire, Ivory
Coast.
“The UN Peacekeepers Day marks a very significant event as the AFP
pays homage to the efforts exerted by our peacekeepers who continue to
propagate peace in foreign lands. Let this remind us of our commitment
to the United Nations leadership as our peace initiatives are not only
limited here in the Philippines, but also to the rest of the world,” AFP
chief Gen. Jessie Dellosa said.
The Philippines first took part in UN peacekeeping operations in 1963
after President Diosdado Macapagal approved the deployment of 9th Tactical
Air Force Squadron to support UN operations in the Congo. Filipino
peacekeepers have since then served with the UN in Cambodia, Iraq,
Haiti, Afghanistan, Burundi, Kosovo, Georgia, and Nepal.
UN awards
At Wednesday’s ceremonies, del Rosario presented the Gawad Diosdado
Macapagal to former Foreign Affairs Secretary Alberto G. Romulo in
recognition of his role in enlarging Philippine participation in UN
operations during his stint as chair of the Interagency Council on UN
Peace Operations.
Aside from Secretary Romulo, the other recipients of the award were
Ambassador Hilario G. Davide, Jr., who was recognized for helping expand
the Philippines’ participation in UN peace operations during his term
as Permanent Representative to the United Nations in New York; Army Gen.
Jaime de los Santos, former force commander of the UN Transitional
Administration in East Timor, for being the first Filipino to head a UN
peacekeeping force; and Police Director Rodolfo Tor, former UN Police
Commissioner in Timor-Leste, for being the first Filipino police officer
to serve in such a high-ranking position.
Del Rosario also handed the Gawad Diosdado Macapagal to Brig. Gen.
Tesero Isleta, AFP (Ret.), who represented the officers and men of the
Philippine Air Force’s 9th Tactical Squadron. |
Awards were also presented to the family of Staff Sgt. Antonio
Batomalaque in recognition of his heroism after becoming the first
Filipino to be killed in action while serving in Haiti in 2005 and to
the officers and men of the 9thTactical Fighter Squadron of
the Philippine Air Force who were the first peacekeepers to be deployed
overseas in 1963. The unit was represented by Brig. Gen. Tereso Isleta.
Global peacekeepers
According to the UN chief, there are 120,000 peacekeepers serving in
17 missions around the world. “So far this year, another 31 peacekeepers
have died,” he said.
The Under-Secretary-General for Peacekeeping Operations, HervĂ© Ladsous, said peacekeepers help to protect millions of vulnerable civilian from violence. “This is not easy work. We go in order to give hope to people who have been through the horror of war, and who yearn for a chance to rebuild their lives in peace,” the peacekeeping chief said.
Currently, UN peacekeeping operations receive contributions of military and police personnel from 116 Member States. In addition to the partnerships with individual nations, UN peacekeeping works closely with UN agencies, funds and programmes working on the ground, as well as with regional organizations, such as the African Union.
The International Day is being marked with events at various peacekeeping missions, including parades and cultural programmes in the Darfur region of Sudan and in Liberia, as well as ceremonies in South Sudan and Lebanon.
The Under-Secretary-General for Peacekeeping Operations, HervĂ© Ladsous, said peacekeepers help to protect millions of vulnerable civilian from violence. “This is not easy work. We go in order to give hope to people who have been through the horror of war, and who yearn for a chance to rebuild their lives in peace,” the peacekeeping chief said.
Currently, UN peacekeeping operations receive contributions of military and police personnel from 116 Member States. In addition to the partnerships with individual nations, UN peacekeeping works closely with UN agencies, funds and programmes working on the ground, as well as with regional organizations, such as the African Union.
The International Day is being marked with events at various peacekeeping missions, including parades and cultural programmes in the Darfur region of Sudan and in Liberia, as well as ceremonies in South Sudan and Lebanon.
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Abigail Kwok | InterAksyon.com| May 31, 2012 | Article Link
Thursday, March 01, 2012
AFP Honors 4th PHL Contingent to Golan Heights
Camp Aguinaldo, Quezon City—The Armed Forces of the Philippines received the 333-strong Philippine Contingent to Golan Heights after nine months of deployment in the contested territory. This is in line with the AFP’s commitment to the United Nations’ peacekeeping efforts to maintain international peace and stability in the area.
The 4th contingent, which was the first ever to be sent with an entire battalion as its core, was given their United Nations Service Medals for the accomplishment of their mission. The welcome and awarding ceremony was held today at the Canopy Area of the General Headquarters.
In a statement, the 4th contingent, led by 76th Infantry Battalion Commanding Officer, Col. Cornelio H. Valencia, said that their deployment coincided with the Arab Spring that affected the United Nations Disengagement Force’s (UNDOF) Area of Limitation and Area of Separation due to a series of protests.
Protests on events like Nakba Day, which means “Day of the Catastrophe,” and ironically is the Arab commemoration of the creation of Israel; and Naksa Day that means “Day of the Setback,” which is the Arab commemoration of the Six Days War, also prompted the contingent to adopt an enhanced patrolling system and clear critical areas from landmine threats.
The AFP has been sending contingents to Golan Heights since November 2009 as part of the UNDOF, replacing Poland in forming the more than 1,000 peacekeeping units of the United Nations.
The 4th Contingent to Golan Heights was composed of 49 officers and 278 enlisted personnel. 30 are women including some officers. There are also a total of eight soldiers who were part of the 3rd Contingent who had extended deployments.
In May last year, the AFP sent the 4th CGH with a whole battalion that forms the core of the contingent. The AFP sent the 76th Infantry Battalion that cleared the Southern part of Quezon of New People’s Army Guerilla Front 42, which was supplemented with additional officers and personnel to comply with the UN Troop Organization and Equipment requirements.
AFP Chief of Staff LtGen Jessie D Dellosa congratulated the contingent for its successful deployment and unceasing commitment to promote peace. “The entire military organization is proud of its soldiers who willingly extend the scope of their service in order to help those who need to maintain peace and security abroad,” said LtGen Dellosa.
“With their dedication to their engagement in very dangerous situations in Golan Heights, our troops still managed to give exemplary contribution to peace, order and security in the area,” LtGen Dellosa added.
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