The United Nations Security Council has renewed the mandate of the peacekeeping force in the Democratic Republic of Congo but decided to cut its numbers by 3600 troops.
The 15-member council o unanimously renewed the $1.2bn mission for another year amid warnings that violence was spreading across the country before elections this year.
The French-drafted resolution reduced the authorised size of the military component of the MONUSCO mission from 19,815 to 16,215 troops, but the force is already under-strength and, in practice, fewer than 500 will go home.
The document is the first adopted since the United States began a review of the 16 UN peacekeeping missions as part of its plan to cut foreign aid and reform the world body’s operations.
It also calls for a dialogue between the UN and the Congolese government, led by President Joseph Kabila, on an ‘exit strategy’.The resolution authorises the replacement of some troops with better-trained specialised units and gives the force a green light to intervene anywhere in the country if needed and not just in the volatile east.
Support of the resolution by all 15 council members reflects widespread backing for the US goal of streamlining the UN’s operations that deploy over 107,000 troops and civilians at an annual cost of more than $7.8bn.
MONUSCO is the biggest and costliest UN mission with about 22,400 people, including nearly 17,000 soldiers and over 1,350 police.
Nikki Haley, the US ambassador to the UN, told the council she was ‘very proud’ that all members had voted to cut the troop ceiling and make the mission stronger and more effective.
The UN force is going ‘to make sure the elections are safe, to make sure that we’re keeping people safe, and that we’re actually looking at the political problems on the ground’, she said.