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Nigeria Targets 20% Women Participation In Peacekeeping
Nigeria hopes to increase the number of its women participating in United Nations peace keeping missions by 20 per cent in 2014, a top UN military officer, Lt.-Gen. Chikadibia Obiakor, has said.
Obiakor, a Nigerian, and the UN Military Adviser on Peacekeeping Operations, told the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) yesterday in New York that Nigeria would also encourage other countries to meet a UN resolution to increase the number of women in peacekeeping.
Resolution 1325, passed in 2000 on “Women, Peace and Security”, recognises that since women bear the brunt of armed conflicts, they should have a commensurate role in their prevention and resolution.
Obiakor said: “what Nigeria has done generally is to bring to the fore, the importance of having more women in its peacekeeping contingents.”
“Not that the 20 per cent has been attained, but we have left where we are.
`There are cultural issues in that there are some countries which are finding it difficult to include women, but we are encouraging such countries to include women in their peacekeeping operations.
“So, we are on the rise and working towards reaching the mark by 2014,” he said.
According to reports, out of the 124,000 peacekeepers from 115 countries currently serving in 15 missions around the world, women make up only eight per cent of the UN police and two per cent of its military personnel.
Nigeria has more than 5,500 peacekeepers in the field.
The UN military adviser said women peacekeepers were the perfect example of “one-to-one communication” needed to encourage those who are affected and traumatised in a conflict situation.
“Women in conflict areas inspire a lot of confidence in the female folks and children (those who bear the brunt in the conflict areas).
“If you have women, the chances are that you get to know more about the conflict and what they think about the solution and what their needs are,” Obiakor, a former Force Commander of the UN Mission in Liberia, said.
The military adviser, who acknowledged that women peacekeeping has its own side of challenges, said “some of the challenges are mitigated because the women are trained.’’
“The problem is in administration because most serving women are married; they have children and husbands and that in itself is a drag because it bothers sometimes on their morale.
“But most times, you find that women are more enthusiastic to discharge their duties and they are more emotionally attached to courtesy in post-conflict areas with regard to the population, which are mostly women and children,” he said.
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