| Subject: UN: Security Council adjusts
police force, slows pull-out of UN troops
Timor-Leste: Security Council adjusts police force, slows pull-out of
UN troops
4 April Despite the welcome progress Timor-Leste has achieved since
its independence last year, persistent security and stability concerns
prompted the Security Council today to adjust the composition and strength
of the police component of the United Nations mission in the country and
to slow the downsizing of the UN peacekeeping force.
Unanimously adopting a new resolution today, the Council decided to
enhance the capability of the UN Mission of Support in East Timor
(UNMISET) to address civil disturbances and to improve the capability of
police to respond to emerging weaknesses. The decision also endorsed a
more gradual downsizing of UNMISET's military component than had been
foreseen when the successor mission was established in May 2002.
The Council's moves today were in line with specific measures proposed
by Secretary-General Kofi Annan in a special report, which Council members
debated in early March.
Citing "significant deterioration" in Timor-Leste's security
environment, Mr. Annan called for a freeze in planned cutbacks of UN
military and police forces and proposed broad recommendations to reinforce
UNMISET's ability to develop the national police force, while taking the
necessary steps to ensure the short-term security and stability required
for that training to succeed.
Stressing that improving the overall capabilities of the Timor-Leste
police force were a key priority, the adjustments adopted today comprise
the inclusion of an international formed unit for one year, and the
provision of additional training capacity in key areas specified in the
Secretary-General's report, including crowd-control skills, police
administration, forensics, tactical operations and border security.
Adjustments to the police force will also include greater emphasis on
human rights and rule of law elements, and the retention of a greater
monitoring and advisory presence in districts where policing authority has
been handed over to the Timor-Leste police force.
The resolution further states that the schedule for downsizing
UNMISET's military component through December would be adjusted according
to recommendations made by the UN Under-Secretary-General for Peacekeeping
in a recent letter. Accordingly, two battalions would be retained within
regions adjoining the unofficial border with Indonesian-controlled West
Timor during that period, together with associated force elements,
including mobility.
In addition, the number of UN peacekeepers would be reduced to 1,750
more gradually than had been foreseen in Security Council resolution 1410,
which had established UNMISET last year and originally decided that the
Mission's downsizing should proceed "as quickly as possible" and
fully devolve all operational responsibilities to the East Timorese
authorities as soon as was feasible, without jeopardizing security.
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