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Electoral
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Defesanet
07 Janeiro 2005
UN News 07Janeiro 2005
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More
than two dozen UN personnel
were killed in 2005
Congo and Haiti
the most dangerous
places for peacekeepers
New York staffers march in memory of slain colleagues
5 January 2006 Fatal attacks against United Nations
civilian and military personnel stationed around the globe
more than doubled last year compared to 2004 as 32 people
were killed in incidents that ranged from bombings in
Kosovo to ambushes by gunfire in the Democratic Republic
of the Congo (DRC), the world body's Staff Union said
today.
The
UN employees that died from malicious attacks last year
comprised nine civilians, two policemen, one security
guard and 20 peacekeepers, it said. That number was up
from at least 15 United Nations employees seven
peacekeepers and eight civilians killed in 2004.
These
incidents once again serve as a tragic reminder of the
innumerable risks undertaken daily by United Nations staff
across the globe, said Guy Candusso, First Vice-President
of the Staff Union. These were only the most visible
attacks against United Nations personnel working in many
dangerous and hostile environments around the world.
Rosemarie
Waters, the Staff Union President, called on Member States
to prosecute the perpetrators of the attacks. This
demonstrates the need to end the current situation of
impunity, with too few perpetrators brought before the
law, she said.
Last
year, one of the most treacherous places for the UN was
DRC, where 13 staffers were killed. It was also the site
of one of the bloodiest attacks that produced the largest
number of fatalities among the world body's personnel
when unidentified militia members ambushed and murdered
nine Bangladeshi peacekeepers in the country's eastern
Ituri district in late February of last year. The blue
helmets, who had been trying to protect a camp for internally
displaced persons from harassment by local militias, lost
their lives in the worst-ever attack against the UN Organization
Mission in the Democratic Republic of the Congo (MONUC).
Four
other peacekeepers died throughout the year in separate
attacks in the troubled African nation, including the
last fatality of the year - which occurred when a MONUC
peacekeeper from India was killed on Christmas Day.
Haiti
turned out to be another hazardous locale for UN personnel
as six people met violent deaths. Two peacekeepers working
with the UN Stabilization Mission in Haiti (MINUSTAH)
were killed on 20 March 2005 in two separate incidents
while the year came to a close when the driver of a vehicle
carrying two UN policemen died after being shot by unidentified
gunmen.
Three
days later, a MINUSTAH peacekeeper died after being shot
in the head as his armoured vehicle was attacked in the
Cité Soleil neighborhood of Port-au-Prince, one
of Haiti's most dangerous areas.
Civilians
also became victims of violence; the first fatality of
the year occurred when a staff member of the UN Children's
Fund (UNICEF) died of gunshot wounds in Nairobi on 4 January.
Six
days later, a staff member of the African Regional office
of the World Health Organization (WHO) died as a result
of a knife attack in her car in Harare, Zimbabwe, It was
the first murder of a UN staff member in that country.
Later
that month, a Nigerian police offer who served with the
UN Interim Administration Mission in Kosovo (UNMIK) was
killed in a bomb explosion as he drove to his work at
the Pritzen Regional Police Headquarters in Kosovo.
The
incidents were gathered by the Staff Council Standing
Committee on the Security and Independence of the International
Civil Service, which is part of the Staff Union.
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