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Germany Commits €82 Million Package to UN Missions Including MINURSO
Germany Commits €82 Million Package to UN Missions Including MINURSO

Morocco World

time15-05-2025

  • Business
  • Morocco World

Germany Commits €82 Million Package to UN Missions Including MINURSO

Doha – Germany announced Wednesday the renewal of its financial support to the United Nations Mission for Western Sahara (MINURSO), with a contribution exceeding €82 million. The funding aims to strengthen UN mission capabilities in key areas, including training, equipment, renewable energy, digital transformation, psychological support, and logistics. The financial package will primarily target MINURSO in Morocco's Sahara, considered one of the UN's principal peace missions in the region. It will also support UNIFIL in Lebanon and UNMISS in South Sudan. This announcement came during the UN Ministerial Conference on Peacekeeping, hosted by Germany's Foreign Ministry in Berlin on May 13-14. UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres and high-ranking officials from over 130 countries attended the gathering. Berlin's renewed financial backing categorically demolishes recent media speculation about MINURSO's possible dissolution. It also signals Berlin's firm resolve to uphold peacekeeping in a region where order is routinely sabotaged by actors bent on chaos and disruption. At the heart of this volatility is the Polisario Front – a separatist militia whose escalating provocations and reckless breach of ceasefire agreements are pushing it toward international designation as a terrorist organization. Its actions not only defy diplomacy but deliberately target Morocco's territorial integrity in a dispute widely regarded as an artificial construct – manufactured during the Cold War to undermine the country's sovereignty. German Defense Minister Boris Pistorius also reaffirmed his country's ongoing support for UN peacekeeping missions worldwide during the conference. Currently, nearly 70,000 personnel – drawn from 120 countries – serve across 11 UN peacekeeping missions worldwide, including approximately 55,000 soldiers, 6,000 police officers, and 1,100 civilian experts. Ironically, this European commitment arrives as the Trump administration reportedly contemplates slashing UN peacekeeping budgets, despite Washington's position as the dominant financial contributor at 27% of the total $5.6 billion funding. Not everyone views MINURSO's continued operation favorably, however. On April 9, the Atlantic Council published a scathing analysis of the mission's effectiveness. Senior fellow Sarah Zaaimi condemned MINURSO's current role as merely perpetuating a 'state of paralysis' in the region while lacking any meaningful mandate. Read also: 'Good Basis for Western Sahara': Germany Renews Support for Autonomy Plan Zaaimi exposed how MINURSO personnel stood idly by as 'spectators' during critical security developments, including Morocco's strategic reclamation of the vital Guerguerat crossing in November 2020. She simultaneously pinpointed the growing international consensus supporting Morocco's position, with formal backing from the US, France, and Spain. Even more damning criticism came from Michael Rubin of the American Enterprise Institute, who on March 19 demanded the Trump administration terminate what he branded 'failed UN peacekeeping operations.' In his Washington Examiner piece, Rubin eviscerated MINURSO as a 34-year, billion-dollar debacle that has failed to complete even basic census responsibilities. Rubin's harsh assessment didn't stop there. He lambasted Polisario's tyrannical practices, accusing the militant separatist group of brutally 'holding wives and children as hostages' to prevent refugee resettlement in Morocco. He further ridiculed MINURSO officials, claiming the surest way to locate them in Western Sahara is to visit 'Laayoune or Dakhla's bars, where MINURSO vehicles are ever-present.' The sharp contrast between Germany's robust financial endorsement and the searing critiques of MINURSO underscores the uneasy paradox at the heart of the mission's role. While European funding breathes life into its operations, fundamental doubts linger over its capacity to meaningfully address a decades-old, politically engineered standoff in Western Sahara. Tags: GermanyMINURSOMinurso in Western Sahara

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