Indian peacekeepers garner praise for helping local communities

Press Trust of India  |  United Nations 

Going beyond their call of duty, Indian peacekeepers serving with the UN missions in and have earned appreciation for undertaking activities to benefit local communities, including raising awareness about and teaching farmers methods of rearing.

The training session, conducted in coordination with local authorities and the Lebanese Armed Forces (LAF), offered an opportunity for the local women to discuss issues about with UNIFIL's female peacekeepers with expertise on the subject.

UNIFIL doctors focused the session, attended by 35 women, on the prevention and early detection of breast cancer.

Since there are no female doctor posted with the Indian Battalion, resources from other UNIFIL battalions operating in the Mission's eastern sector were pooled in to conduct the training, the report said.

Indian peacekeepers deployed with the in (UNMISS) spoke to farmers in the Upper Nile area about new methods to generate income through rearing, with the aim of helping the local communities improve their methods of livelihood.

"I have lost many goats, particularly small kids, in the recent past. After undergoing this training workshop, I understand what mistakes I've been making," James Nyawanya, one of the participants in an interactive teaching session with Indian peacekeepers, was quoted as saying in a report by the mission.

"The incidences of increased and death among goats in surrounding areas have led us to organise this workshop for farmers, to enable them to provide special care for newly born kids," said Lieutenant

The peacekeepers also provided a reference handbook on 'farming and Management', specifically tailored to the needs of local communities in

appreciated the mission's efforts, encouraging all the participants to imbibe new aspects of goat farming and use the knowledge to improve their management and create new income-generating opportunities.

Participants were trained on nutritional and health management, housing, effective first aid, and deworming, breed improvement and value addition of milk.

In South Sudan's Jonglei region, Indian peacekeepers are providing critical veterinary know-how that is helping the local community save cows and livelihoods.

An UNMISS article said that the UN Indian veterinary team works with the locals six days a week throughout the year. Last year, they treated more than 22,000 animals.

Daniel Deng, an in Bor town, said the veterinary know-how of the Indian peacekeepers was leading to immense benefits to the local community.

"The biggest help they give us is the training of animal health workers, who learn how to identify and treat diseases," Deng said.

"Last year they did a lot of tick control and treatment which helped control fever, which normally kills a lot of every year. This time, the veterinary team saved most of our dear animals," Deng said.

S E Thomas from the Indian peacekeeping contingent was cited in the article as saying that preventive measures and timely treatment have reduced deaths to just a handful, expressing hope and belief that their work can keep previously mass-killing at bay.

Separately, as part of activities marking the month of the woman, the deployed with the in the DR (MONUSCO) distributed household solar lamps to women in Mashango, a remote village in North Kivu where there is no

is among the largest troop contributing countries to UN peacekeeping missions deployed in about nine peacekeeping missions. The highest number of personnel is deployed with the in the Democratic Republic of the (MONUSCO).

(This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

First Published: Fri, March 22 2019. 10:45 IST