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China Pacekeepers in the United Nations Interim Force in Lebanon

UN Peacekeepers

Serving for peace, sacrificing for humanity

Since 1948 more than two million people have served as in hotspots around the world, including more than 65,000 today.

They provide security, stability and hope for a better future to war-affected communities. And they often do so at great personal risk and under very harsh conditions, leaving their families behind thousands of hundreds of miles away from their homelands. More than have lost their lives serving under the UN flag.

The United Nations does not have its own military or police force. It relies on individual UN Member States to contribute personnel to its peacekeeping operations. Today, UN peacekeepers hail from more than 100 troop and police contributing countries, but they are united in their goal to help provide security and stability to some of the most vulnerable people on earth. Collectively, they perform acts of courage and compassion every day.

Beyond their regular mandated activities ¨C such as protecting civilians and supporting peace processes -- peacekeepers often carry out humanitarian efforts such as delivering free medical and veterinary care, providing access to water; supporting schools and orphanages; building roads and bridges and other key infrastructure which benefit communities and bring people together.

The United Nations honours the service and sacrifice of all peacekeepers and commends the contributions from all the countries that provide our peacekeeping operations with military and police personnel.

Their stories of service and sacrifice as well as courage and compassion are worth listening to.

Learn more about the enduring legacy of UN Peacekeepers.

Stories of service and sacrifice

Thank you China Peacekeepers

Honouring peacekeepers from China

China is the eight largest contributor of UN peacekeepers and is at the top of the leader board among Security Council permanent members.

China first sent peacekeepers to the UN Truce Supervision Organization in the Middle East in 1990.

Today, more than 1,800 Chinese peacekeepers, including 66 women, serve in eight peacekeeping operations in Abyei, the Central African Republic, Cyprus, the Democratic Republic of Congo, Lebanon, the Middle East, South Sudan, and Western Sahara.

They protect civilians, clear minefields making roads and farmland safer, and undertake humanitarian outreach activities.

Twenty-one Chinese peacekeepers have lost their lives while serving under the UN flag. We honour their memory.

The UN is grateful to China for the service and sacrifice of its peacekeepers. Thank you, China!

 

UN peacekeeping involves a broader scope of activities than most people would imagine.

Just take a look at our Blue Helmets from serving with in Unity State, who set aside time for vocational trainings and the welfare of cattle and, indirectly, their owners, whose livelihoods depend on their animals being healthy.

Video: Martin Mariaka/UNMISS

Chief Superintendent Zainab Gbla's journey to becoming the UN Woman Police Officer of the Year began with a powerful memory of living through violence in Sierra Leone. Serving in the disputed Abyei region as a peacekeeper, she has turned that inspiration into action, through meaningful community initiatives.

UNIFIL deminers from China started work in a second UNIFIL position this week to clear the base and its perimeter of unexploded ordnances (UXOs) and other explosives from the recent hostilities.

The operation is taking place at UN Position 6-50, located along the Blue Line southwest of the village of Yaroun, and is expected to continue for at least two weeks.

A UNIFIL position in Ras Naqoura, which is the westernmost UNIFIL base along the 120-km Blue Line, was the first to undergo demining operation since the recent hostilities. Since 23 April, Chinese deminers have cleared 558 square meters of land in and around the Ras Naqoura base. Clearance operations there are ongoing and expected to last another month.