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Pakistani UN peacekeeping forces trading Gun for Gold

"The trading went on in 2005. A UN investigative team sent to gather evidence was obstructed and threatened. The team's report was buried by the UN itself to "avoid political fallout". - BBC

Now try reading oth the reports together, the BBC report is true.

Pakistan had force and they were later replaced by new forces again. Now y would UN burry such reports, after all the reason for deployment of UN forces to bring peace and this is done through SC of UN.. Now how would pakistan escape scrutny from UN.

BTW can u show me how can u achieve peace when u are giving weapons bak to rebels. Than again other factor is once those weapons are given bak they will be used against pakistani forces so i doubt they want to kill themself for gold.
 
BBC report misleading: ISPR

Friday, May 25, 2007 | DT

RAWALPINDI: An Inter Services Public Relations spokesman has rejected a BBC report that Pakistani peacekeeping troops in the Congo were involved in illegal trades of gold for guns as misleading.

The spokesman said that Pakistan’s permanent mission in New York was informed by the UN Department of Peacekeeping Operations (UNDPKO) on May 22 that BBC had contacted them for a story on some allegations, which were being investigated.

“They were informed that at this stage these were mere allegations, which have to be investigated to ascertain facts. Mr Kamal Saiki, spokesman for the UN Peacekeeping Mission in Congo (MONUC), has also denied the allegations saying they are being investigated,” the spokesman said.

“UN investigations cannot be blocked nor can UN police be surrounded by UN peacekeeping troops and go unnoticed. This is why Ambassador William Swing, chief of the UN Mission in Congo, has also emphatically denied the charges.

“Pakistan has been one of the largest troop contributors to UN peacekeeping operations worldwide and our services are very well known. We have a history dating back to 1960 and over 25 countries and our contributions have been lauded by eminent leaders like Premier Chou-en-Lai and President Soekarno. We have current force levels of over 10,000 troops in seven missions,” he said. app
 
Pakistan dismisses DR Congo claim

Pakistan has dismissed as not credible allegations that its troops traded in gold and sold weapons to militias in DR Congo while serving as UN peacekeepers. A spokesman for the Pakistani military, Maj-Gen Wahid Arshad, told the BBC a UN investigation into the matter was still going on and had not named any country.

The BBC reported on Wednesday that the inquiry into the claims may have been blocked for political reasons. The UN says it will seek to discipline anyone compromising its operations. A top commander with the FNI militia, who did not want to be named, has telephoned the BBC to confirm that some of his fellow militia leaders had trafficked gold with UN peacekeepers. He also said they had been given weapons to fight the rival UPC militia.

Trafficking allegations

On Wednesday, the BBC's Martin Plaut said he had found that the UN had begun an internal investigation in early 2006 into allegations that Pakistani peacekeeping troops had traded in gold and sold weapons to Congolese militia groups they were meant to disarm.

The Pakistani battalion at the centre of the claims was based in and around the mining town of Mongbwalu, in the north-east of the country, two years ago. They helped bring peace to an area that had previously seen bitter fighting between the Lendu and Hema ethnic groups.

But witnesses said Pakistani officers had also supplied weapons to notorious militia commanders in return for gold. When the UN was eventually alerted to the allegations by Human Rights Watch in late 2005, it instituted a major investigation by the Office for Internal Oversight Services. However, a UN official connected with the inquiry told the BBC there seemed to have been a plan to bury its results, in order to avoid alienating Pakistan - the largest contributor of troops to the UN.

'Baseless'

But Gen Arshad dismissed the allegations about his country's troops as baseless.

"It is a distortion of the facts and it is misleading," he told the BBC's Newshour programme. "The allegations of the locals are humbug, as far as I'm concerned."

Gen Arshad said the Pakistani government had not been aware that its battalion in DR Congo was being investigated, even though the BBC has seen evidence that the UN sent the battalion's headquarters a letter demanding its full co-operation in the inquiry.

"If the UN felt there was obstruction... they would have informed the government of Pakistan," he said. "Until the time the report is given to us, and if there are any names in the report, only then will we be able to say something."

In a statement issued in response to the BBC's findings, the UN Mission in the Democratic Republic of the Congo (Monuc) said no action had been taken because its inquiry was still active. Despite that, however, Monuc insisted it had an "absolute zero-tolerance policy on misconduct". Monuc spokesman Kemal Saiki also said that at least 30 UN peacekeepers had been killed in fighting in north-eastern DR Congo, some by FNI fighters.

Story from BBC NEWS:
http://news.bbc.co.uk/go/pr/fr/-/1/hi/worl...ica/6690155.stm
 
It’s true, the troops had just been watching three kings on DVD and then decided to play out the film in real. The witness who was declined the part as SSgt. Chief Elgin [Ice cube] so in his fury he ratted on the Pakistani troops.
 
"If the UN felt there was obstruction... they would have informed the government of Pakistan," he said. "Until the time the report is given to us, and if there are any names in the report, only then will we be able to say something."

Hehehehehahahahhahahahahahahahahahahaha *** wipes tear from eye ***
Hehehehehahahahhahahahahahahahahahahaha Ahh that's a good one
Hehehehehahahahhahahahahahahahahahahaha, a UN suit actually got the balls to write something derogatory about anything? Koffi I-am-too-busy-at-my-weekend-getaway-to-bother Annan told the Israelis off when they bombed UNIFIL and then quietly told his people to call it an accident in the UN report.

Hell, I'm surprised that it even this much got out. Usually, it's the contributing nation's own military justice system that publishes these findings, not the UN.
 
Gen Arshad said the Pakistani government had not been aware that its battalion in DR Congo was being investigated, even though the BBC has seen evidence that the UN sent the battalion's headquarters a letter demanding its full co-operation in the inquiry.

hide and seek...PA in a soup....
 
hide and seek...PA in a soup....

LOL! It would be the last thing.

If Pakistan demands its troops back.. ever wondered what would happen to U.N? :cheesy:

More than 10,000 troops. No ONE can match it! :bunny:
 
IIRC we're the largest contributor to UN's Peacekeeping force, without us it will collapse. :angel:
 
I know United States doesn't. Whats the reason?

Too much engaged in carrying their own flag?
 
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