PKO/47

GHANA JOINS STAND-BY ARRANGEMENTS FOR MORE RAPID DEPLOYMENT OF PEACE-KEEPING TROOPS

29 May 1996


Press Release
PKO/47


GHANA JOINS STAND-BY ARRANGEMENTS FOR MORE RAPID DEPLOYMENT OF PEACE-KEEPING TROOPS

19960529 NEW YORK, 29 May (Department of Peace-Keeping Operations) -- Ghana today became the third United Nations Member State to formally commit resources to the stand-by arrangements regime designed to accelerate deployment of troops during the start-up phase of peace-keeping operations.

The Permanent Representative of Ghana, Jacob B. Wilmot, signed a memorandum of understanding with the United Nations formalizing the agreement in a ceremony at noon today at United Nations Headquarters. Kofi Annan, Under-Secretary-General for Peace-keeping Operations, signed it on behalf of the United Nations.

Under the terms of the agreement, Ghana pledges to provide a significant number of troops, including specialized units, within a short time-frame, if called upon by the United Nations to help launch a new mission.

Stand-by arrangements were created in 1994 as a means to fill the three- to-six-month gap between authorization of a peace-keeping mission by the Security Council and full deployment by standard recruitment methods. Nations pledge troops, logistic support or other crucial resources within days or weeks, instead of the months normally required. The pledge is not unconditional, however; contributors may decide to participate or not in response to each call for support.

To date, 55 Member States have expressed willingness to participate in the regime. Three have formalized the commitment through the signing of memorandums of understanding -- Jordan, Denmark and now Ghana.

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For information media. Not an official record.