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SG/SM/8713-OBV/349

‘PEACEKEEPING BY ITSELF CANNOT END WAR, BUT IT CAN HELP PREVENT A RECURRENCE OF FIGHTING’, SECRETARY-GENERAL SAYS IN PEACEKEEPERS’ DAY MESSAGE

21/05/2003
Press Release
SG/SM/8713
OBV/349


‘PEACEKEEPING BY ITSELF CANNOT END WAR, BUT IT CAN HELP PREVENT A RECURRENCE

OF FIGHTING’, SECRETARY-GENERAL SAYS IN PEACEKEEPERS’ DAY MESSAGE


Following is the message by Secretary-General Kofi Annan on the International Day of United Nations Peacekeepers, 29 May:


This first Day of International Peacekeepers commemorates the sacrifice and selfless commitment of peacekeepers serving throughout the world.  It celebrates what United Nations peacekeepers have done, in so many countries, to relieve suffering and reconcile warring parties.


Fifty-five years ago, soldiers were sent onto the battlefield under a new flag and with a new mission:  a mission of peace.  That mission was without precedent in human history.  It was an attempt to confront and defeat the worst in man with the best in man; to counter violence with tolerance, might with moderation, and war with peace. 


Peacekeeping missions today are much more complex than they were then.  The duties and responsibilities of peacekeepers have grown.


Of course, we still undertake the critically important task of building confidence through monitoring ceasefires and demilitarized zones. 


But today’s peacekeepers are also engaged in policing and training; serving as judges and prosecutors; administering health and education; ensuring that human rights and gender equality are observed.  They have built administrations in Kosovo and East Timor.  And in Afghanistan, they are helping the new authorities establish the rule of law.


Today, there are nearly 37,000 United Nations peacekeepers deployed in 14 missions on three continents.  They come from 89 countries.  No figures, however, can do justice to the ultimate sacrifice that more than 1,800 peacekeepers have made over this half-century.  On this day, we pay tribute to each one of them.


The mission of United Nations peacekeeping will continue.  Peacekeeping by itself cannot end war.  But it can help prevent a recurrence of fighting.  Above all, it gives time and space for conflict resolution.  It gives peace a chance. 


I am proud to salute the peacekeepers serving today, and to pay tribute to those who served in the past.  Their sacrifice has made the world a safer place.


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For information media. Not an official record.