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Report

Published:

Assessing the Effectiveness of the United Nations Mission in Mali (MINUSMA)

Written by

Jaïr van der Lijn
Stockholm International Peace Research Institute (SIPRI)
Linda Darkwa
Training for Peace (TfP)
Fiifi Edu-Afful
Senior Research Fellow and the Deputy Program Head of the Peace Support Operations Programme at the Kofi Annan International Peacekeeping Training Centre (KAIPTC)
John Karlsrud
Research Professor, Head of the Research group on Peace, Conflict and Development
Natasja Rupesinghe
Former employee
Tofayel Ahmed
Tobias von Gienanth

Ed.

Cedric H. de Coning
Research Professor
MINUSMA 2019 report cover 2.png

Summary:

Until 2016 MINUSMA managed to strengthen stability in northern Mali, decreasing the number of civilians killed in the conflict, and allowing large numbers of displaced persons to return home. MINUSMA also assisted the peace process, culminating in the 2015 Algiers Agreement. Many of these achievements are still standing. However, since 2016 MINUSMA’s effectiveness in terms of stabilisation and the protection of civilians has decreased. In the North, the signatory parties have been making slow progress in the implementation of the Algiers Agreement and the 2018 Pact for Peace. In addition, central Mali has destabilised significantly, as Jihadist activities have stoked a vicious cycle of inter-communal violence that has reached unprecedented levels. MINUSMA has only been mandated to help the Malian government address the situation since June 2018.
As one of the largest multidimensional peacekeeping operations – currently including nearly 13,000 soldiers and 1,800 police officers from 57 contributing countries, and almost 750 civilians – MINUSMA has been provided with significant resources and an extraordinarily ambitious mandate. However, the Mission finds itself at a crossroads. It needs time to succeed, but this is valuable time Mali does not have. Civilians have come under increasing attack, and the US, in particular, is losing interest in supporting a costly UN peace operation that is not able to deliver quick results.

This report considers the degree to which there is an alignment between the mission’s resources and its mandate. It also makes an assessment of the options available to the Mission to increase its effectiveness in the face of extremely challenging circumstances.
  • Published year: 2019
  • Publisher: Norwegian Institute of International Affairs (NUPI)
  • Page count: 22
  • Language: English
  • URL 1: http://hdl.handle.net/11250/2599513
  • URL 3:

Themes

  • Africa
  • Peace operations
  • United Nations

Written by

Jaïr van der Lijn
Stockholm International Peace Research Institute (SIPRI)
Linda Darkwa
Training for Peace (TfP)
Fiifi Edu-Afful
Senior Research Fellow and the Deputy Program Head of the Peace Support Operations Programme at the Kofi Annan International Peacekeeping Training Centre (KAIPTC)
John Karlsrud
Research Professor, Head of the Research group on Peace, Conflict and Development
Natasja Rupesinghe
Former employee
Tofayel Ahmed
Tobias von Gienanth
Relevant innhold
Research project
Research project
Effectiveness of Peace Operations Network
Research project
Research project
Training for Peace 2020 - 2025