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E Timor to take over policing as UN withdraws

Published: 24 Oct 2012 - 07:02 am | Last Updated: 07 Feb 2022 - 01:11 am

 

JAKARTA: UN peacekeepers will hand over full responsibility for policing to East Timor next week as they begin withdrawing in earnest from Asia’s youngest nation, a UN official said yesterday.

The final batch of peacekeepers will leave in December in line with a timetable to depart by the end of the year, said Finn Reske-Nielsen, head of the United Nations Integrated Mission in East Timor (UNMIT).

“We will pull them out over the next two months. By the 15th of December there will be no UN police (peacekeepers) left in the country,” he told reporters in Jakarta.

The current UN mission arrived in 2006 after a political crisis in which dozens were killed and hundreds of thousands displaced, with a mandate to restore security.

The only major violence since then was a 2008 failed assassination attempt against former president Jose Ramos-Horta, and the country this year held largely peaceful presidential polls and general elections.

The UN partially handed over responsibility for security to Timorese police in March last year and from November 1 they will be expected to operate on their own.

It would be the “end of any kind of operation of support by the UN police”, Reske-Nielsen said.

“At the moment whenever we are asked to provide support for a police operation, we will do that. But as of November 1 that stops and we will send the police home in very short order,” he said.

Afp