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UN mission favours takeover of AMIB

[DRC] Behrooz Sadry, the deputy special representative of the UN secretary-general in the DRC. Photo taken 4 April 2003. Bunia, Ituri District, DRC. Olu Sarr/IRIN
Behrooz Sadry, the UN Secretary-General's Deputy Special Representative to the DRC
A UN evaluation team said on Thursday, at the end of its two-week visit to Burundi, that it favoured converting the African peacekeeping mission in Burundi (AMIB) into a UN operation. The UN team, headed by Deputy Special Representative for the Secretary-General for the DRC Behrooz Sadry, was in Burundi to ascertain the progress made in the peace process between the transitional government and its present and former armed opponents. Sadry said the team came at the invitation of the government and South African Deputy President Jacob Zuma, who is the facilitator in the Burundi peace process. Sadry said they wanted to know if the UN would sustain the African mission. "The response to this request is positive and strong," he said. He said if the UN Security Council gave the go-ahead, there would "simply be the change of helmets" of the 2,870 AMIB troops from Ethiopia, Mozambique and South Africa. "With the investigations we made on their efforts, means, experience and capability, the United Nations will feel happy to keep them as blue helmets," he added. The UN team held consultations with Burundi authorities, former armed groups and other international partners who, Sadry said, also wanted the UN to take over the peacekeeping role. Funding problems have hampered AMIB’s mission. The mission was mandated to oversee the implementation of ceasefire agreements, support disarmament and demobilisation initiatives and the reintegration of combatants, ensure favourable conditions for the establishment of a UN peacekeeping mission, and contribute to political and economic stability in Burundi, according the African Union.

This article was produced by IRIN News while it was part of the United Nations Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs. Please send queries on copyright or liability to the UN. For more information: https://shop.un.org/rights-permissions

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