Jump to navigation
All UN missions
Faced with muddy quagmires caused by intense flooding, Mongolian peacekeepers have found an innovative way to reach communities in need in the Bentiu region of South Sudan.
A state of mind. An elusive dream. Hard-fought with many casualties. Agreed on. Waiting to happen. Partially achieved. Already here.
The progress of peace, it seems, is a matter of perceptions.
“We have a cause to fight. We don’t just enjoy being in the military, we have decided to take up arms to defend our children,” says Captain Rebecca Nya Piuudup in opposition-controlled Mogok in Greater Jonglei.
Statement of the Special Representative of the UN Secretary-General David Shearer Briefing to the Security Council on South Sudan
Maintaining momentum key to progressing peace process in South Sudan
UNMISS Protection of Civilian (PoC) sites Update No. 248
The year is 2006, the place is Liberia, West Africa. A United Nations peacekeeping mission with a mandate that includes capacity building is carrying out the recruitment of corrections officers.
The communities of Lohiri and Pashidi in Eastern Equatoria hope to mend broken relations through dialogue.
In March, simmering tensions over ancestral land demarcation and ownership escalated into violence between the communities of the Lotuko in Lohiri and the Pari in Pachidi, both located in Eastern Equatoria.