By AFP
In Summary
- The UN is preparing to send peacekeepers home over a "lack of responsiveness" during a bloody attack at a camp in South Sudan in February, a senior official announced Wednesday.
- Ethiopian, Rwandan and Indian contingents were at Malakal at the time of the attack.
- UN spokesman Stephane Dujarric said preliminary findings from an internal report indicate "there was confusion with respect to command and control" and "a lack of coordination among the various civilian and uniformed peacekeepers" during the crisis.
The UN is preparing to send peacekeepers home
over a "lack of responsiveness" during a bloody attack at a camp in
South Sudan in February, a senior official announced Wednesday.
UN peacekeeping chief Herve Ladsous acknowledged
that an investigation had found "inadequacies" in peacekeepers' response
when gunmen in army uniforms stormed the camp in the northeastern town
of Malakal on February 17 and 18, firing on civilians and torching
shelters.
The attack on the base, where nearly 48,000 people were sheltering, left at least 30 dead and 123 wounded.
Many of those at the camp came from areas where no aid or shelter had been available for months.
"There was a lack of responsiveness by some, a lack of understanding of the rules of engagement by some," Ladsous said.
He refused to single out any individuals, stating:
"I will not name names but there will be repatriations of units and of
individual officers."
Ethiopian, Rwandan and Indian contingents were at Malakal at the time of the attack.
"I can assure you that there will be a follow-up as there has been in other theatres of operation," Ladsous said.
UN spokesman Stephane Dujarric said preliminary
findings from an internal report indicate "there was confusion with
respect to command and control" and "a lack of coordination among the
various civilian and uniformed peacekeepers" during the crisis.
The aid group Doctors Without Borders has also
said the UN mission "failed in its duty to safeguard the people at the
site and could have averted many fatalities."
Tens of thousands of people displaced by civil war live in UN camps in South Sudan, the world's youngest country.
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