Posted by
Harry Starks on Monday, November 24, 2008 3:58:35 AM
Some European nations are pushing to send teams to Congo to
help secure humanitarian aid until more U.N. peacekeepers can be
deployed, French Ambassador Jean-Maurice Ripert said
Wednesday.
France, Belgium and Sweden are considering
how to give Congo added help by arriving ahead of the Security
Council's expected addition of 3,100 troops to augment its beleaguered
peacekeeping mission, he said.
The teams presumably
would be armed but there was no immediate word on that as the nations
were still discussing the proposal and details haven't been worked out.
But Ripert stressed that they would not be linked to the EU's rapid
reaction military force.
He said they could possibly
help secure areas around the provincial capital of Goma and roads
needed to distribute food and other humanitarian
aid.
In the past month, as rebel forces swept toward
Goma, the U.N. held positions but could not protect all the civilians
caught up in the fighting. That led to calls for reinforcing -
reconfiguring the U.N.'s peacekeeping
contingent.
Ripert said that once the council
approves the additional peacekeeping troops "it will then be easier for
the European Union to try to see what they can do on the purely
humanitarian side," said Ripert, whose nation holds the EU
presidency.
But getting more troops on the group
could take months. Congo currently has the world's largest U.N.
peacekeeping mission, with 17,000 troops.