Efforts continue to try free 43 UN peacekeepers held in Syria

Irish troops provide security escort for other UN troops as area remains on high alert

An UN peacekeeper passes a road sign at the Bin Tal area in the Golan Heights near the Quneitra crossing, on the Israel-Syrian border yesterdau.  The UN says it is working to secure the release of 43 peacekeepers. Photograph: Atef Safadi/EPA
An UN peacekeeper passes a road sign at the Bin Tal area in the Golan Heights near the Quneitra crossing, on the Israel-Syrian border yesterdau. The UN says it is working to secure the release of 43 peacekeepers. Photograph: Atef Safadi/EPA

Militants fighting the Syrian army have detained 43 UN peacekeepers in the Israeli-occupied Golan Heights and trapped another 81 in the region, and the world body is working to secure their release, the United Nations has said.

The affected peacekeepers are from the Philippines and Fiji, UN spokesman Stephane Dujarric told reporters.

“During a period of increased fighting beginning yesterday between armed elements and Syrian Arab Armed Forces within the area of separation in the Golan Heights, 43 peacekeepers from the United Nations Disengagement Observer Force (Undof) were detained early this morning by an armed group in the vicinity of Al Qunaytirah,” the UN press office said in a statement.

It added that another 81 Undof peacekeepers were being restricted to their positions in the vicinity of Ar Ruwayhinah and Burayqah.

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Mr Dujarric said the 81 trapped troops were from the Philippines and the 43 seized ones from Fiji.

“The United Nations is making every effort to secure the release of the detained peacekeepers, and to restore the full freedom of movement of the force throughout its area of operation,” it said.

A spokesman for the Irish Defence Forces said that in light of the ongoing situation in the Golan Heights, elements of the Force Reserve Company of the 44th Infantry Group had been deployed by the force commander into the zone of separation to support other United Nations Disengagement Observation Force (Undof) personnel.

“Irish personnel secured a route, provided security as Undof troops withdrew from a UN position and escorted them to the force headquarters in Camp Faouar.

“The 44th Infantry Group remain on high alert, prepared for further taskings from the Force Commander,” the spokesman said.

“All Defence Forces personnel and equipment remain safe and accounted for. The 44th Infantry Group and Defence Forces headquarters continue to monitor the situation.”

Britain’s UN Ambassador Mark Lyall Grant, president of the Security Council this month, told reporters the trapped peacekeepers were surrounded by Islamist militants.

The 15-nation Security Council, which was meeting on the humanitarian situation in Syria, was also discussing the issue of the kidnapped peacekeepers, Lyall Grant said.

The Philippine army said in a statement that militants and had surrounded the Philippine contingent’s encampments with Fijian hostages in tow and demanded that the Filipino troops surrender their firearms.

“The Philippine peacekeepers held their ground and demonstrated their resolve to defend their positions,” it said.

“They did not surrender their firearms as they may in turn be held hostage themselves.”

The Security Council issued a statement strongly condemning the seizure of the peacekeepers and calling for their immediate release.

UN secretary general Ban Ki-moon echoed the council word’s in his own statement of condemnation.

Reporters asked Mr Dujarric if the United Nations was in contact with the group holding the Fijians.

He declined to specify who the world body was in contact with but said there was communication under way.

“There are contacts being held at different levels, on the mission and on the ground,” he said.

“They are talking to representatives of various armed groups that they have ... operational contact with. They are talking to countries in the region.”

Mr Dujarric was also asked about the rules for peacekeepers in such situations.

“In extreme circumstances, these troops are trained and prepared and equipped to defend themselves, but, obviously, each situation has to be analyzed on a case-by-case basis,” he said.

Fiji army chief

UN officials say that the peacekeepers, whose job is to monitor the cessation of hostilities, carry small arms that are only to be used in extreme circumstances. In previous situations where Undof peacekeepers were held hostage, the troops did not use their weapons.

The Quneitra crossing on the Golan is a strategic plateau captured by Israel in a 1967 Middle East war.

Syria and Israel technically remain at war. Syrian troops are not allowed in an area of separation under a 1973 ceasefire formalised in 1974.

Undof monitors the area of separation, a narrow strip of land running about 70 km from Mount Hermon on the Lebanese border to the Yarmouk River frontier with Jordan. There are 1,223 Undof peacekeepers from six countries.

Before the Syrian civil war, now in its fourth year, the region was generally quiet and the peacekeepers had mostly found their biggest enemy to be boredom.

The force’s personnel come from Fiji, India, Ireland, Nepal, Netherlands and the Philippines.

The United Nations said this week that the Philippines has decided to pull out of Undof, and from a UN force in Liberia, which is struggling with an outbreak of the deadly Ebola virus.

Reuters