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United Nations, New York – Former President John Agyekum Kufuor has called for flexibility in the mandate of United Nations Peace-Keeping operations to enable them to respond appropriately to changing trends in conflict resolution. “Such responses need not be only military functions but should cover diverse activities, including conducting elections in countries with internal strife; humanitarian intervention assistance; land-mine clearance, post-conflict peace building; disarmament, demobilization and reintegration,” he said. Peace-keeping should also take into consideration the tremendous influence created by the explosion of information communication technology which has made the world a truly global village with information readily accessible to all by the minute. The former President was speaking at the United Nations General Assembly special session on Peace-Keeping at its headquarters in New York under the theme: “UN Peace-Keeping – Looking into the Future.” The session was opened by UN General Secretary Ban-ki Moon and addressed by dignitaries including the President of the General Assembly, Joseph Deiss, the Under-Secretary of the UN Lakhdar Brahimi and former President of Finland and Nobel Prize Laureate Martti Ahtisaari. Former President Kufuor said peacekeeping in the post-cold war era required a comprehensive and integrated response from multi-disciplinary agencies of which the military is only a part. “The changed global geo-political scenario and the unleashing of various nationalist forces have made peace operations complex and fraught with challenges. “The days when the task of the soldier on UN peace-keeping operation involved the simple and mundane tasks of observing, patrolling, reporting, coordinating and controlling are gone.” Former President Kufuor said military activities in modern-day peacekeeping should be designed to create the conditions in which diplomatic and humanitarian activities can take place. “The end state should be a stable settlement of disputes so that an enabling environment can be created for socio-economic development to flourish and mankind saved from the scourge of war.” Former President Kufuor praised Ghana’s role in UN peace-keeping which started with the Congo, now Democratic Republic of Congo, crisis in the early 1960s and is still continuing. “After disengaging in 1964, Ghanaian troops were next deployed with the UN Emergency Force in the Sinai, Egypt and later with UNIFIL in South Lebanon, where currently Ghana is the longest-serving force. “Our troops have also gone further afield to Cambodia, Rwanda, Kuwait, Afghanistan, Croatia, Bosnia-Herzegorvina and Serbia. “Currently we are in Liberia, Cote d’Ivoire, Democratic Republic of Congo (for the second time) and Chad. Under the auspices of ECOWAS, Ghana also took active part in the regional peace efforts in Sierra-Leone, Liberia and Cote d’Ivoire. “For a country the size of Ghana, she is reputed to be the fifth largest contributor to UN peacekeeping in the world,” he said and asked that regional organizations such as the African Union should play a more active part in peace-keeping. Credit: Frank Agyekum Spokesperson, Office of former President JA Kufuor

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DISCLAIMER: The Views, Comments, Opinions, Contributions and Statements made by Readers and Contributors on this platform do not necessarily represent the views or policy of Multimedia Group Limited.