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India Asks UN For Zero Tolerance Towards Sexual Exploitation In Peacekeeping Operations

India Asks UN For Zero Tolerance Towards Sexual Exploitation In Peacekeeping Operations
United Nations blue peacekeeper's helmet with the initials UN on side
Gary Ombler via Getty Images
United Nations blue peacekeeper's helmet with the initials UN on side

UNITED NATIONS -- India has asked the United Nations to ensure zero tolerance while dealing with cases of sexual exploitation in peacekeeping operations, saying cases of abuse shame the world body.

"Such abuse scars the lives of men, women and children.We take such cases with utmost seriousness," visiting MP Rahul Kaswan said at a debate on peacekeeping operations here.

He said India would like to strongly suggest that the "UN must apply one standard, that of zero tolerance, while dealing with all cases of sexual exploitation and abuse in all its field operations, whether these be peacekeeping, peacebuilding or others."

India, which has contributed over 185,000 troops in 48 missions mandated so far, has repeatedly raised the issue of the opaque manner in which the UN Security Council continues to mandate peace operations, without any accountability or transparency.

He said that direct and formal consultations between the troop contributing countries and the Security Council during mandate formulation and change is a "sine qua non" for an effective peacekeeping operation.

"It is not only the formulation of the mandates but also the change of the mandates mid-stream which is a source of concern for us," he said yesterday.

He also voiced India's concerns over the proclivity of the Security Council to mix the traditional original mandate given to the peacekeeping operations subsequently with a new interventionist mandate for a small portion of the troops in the same peacekeeping operation.

He said primacy must be given to the pacific settlement of disputes as the core objective of UN peace operations.

Referring to the new demands being placed on the peacekeeping operations with the changing nature of conflicts, he urged the United Nations and the Security Council to ensure a mandatory inclusion in all peacekeeping mandates of legally binding provisions for prosecuting, penalizing and neutralizing any non-governmental armed groups and armed militias causing, or threatening to cause, harm to the peacekeeping opeartions.

He noted that peace operations are not the appropriate tool for counter-terrorism operations and said that UN peacekeepers are not suitable for targeted offensive action against armed militias, non-state actors and terrorists.

He further stressed on the urgent need to offset the mismatch between the requirement of the resources and the actual allocated resources.

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This article exists as part of the online archive for HuffPost India, which closed in 2020. Some features are no longer enabled. If you have questions or concerns about this article, please contact indiasupport@huffpost.com.