DC/3059

UNITED NATIONS LAUNCHES NEW STANDARDS FOR DISARMAMENT, DEMOBILIZATION, REINTEGRATION OF EX-COMBATANTS

18 December 2006
Press ReleaseDC/3059
Department of Public Information • News and Media Division • New York

UNITED NATIONS LAUNCHES NEW STANDARDS FOR DISARMAMENT, DEMOBILIZATION,


REINTEGRATION OF EX-COMBATANTS

 


With decades of experience in disarming, demobilizing and reintegrating ex-combatants, including some 400,000 over the past five years alone, the United Nations today launched a new set of standards aimed at improving the process, which is considered essential to restoring stability to war-ravaged countries.


“We’re very proud of the work we’ve done so far in places like Sierra Leone and Afghanistan, where more than 134,000 combatants laid down their arms with United Nations help, but we acknowledge that we can do better,” said United Nations Deputy Secretary-General Mark Malloch Brown.


“That is why these standards are so important; they will allow us to ensure that all phases of the process -- from disarmament to demobilization to reintegration of former combatants back into society -- are carried out smoothly, with due attention to the special concerns of different groups and situations,” Mr. Malloch Brown said.


Many aspects of the new Integrated Disarmament, Demobilization and Reintegration Standards (IDDRS) are “field-tested,” having been drawn from the best practices of various United Nations agencies and missions currently working in peacekeeping.


The United Nations has been involved in supporting disarmament, demobilization and reintegration programmes since the late 1980s.  In the past five years alone, disarmament, demobilization and reintegration has been included in the mandates for multidimensional peacekeeping operations in Burundi, Côte d’Ivoire, Democratic Republic of the Congo, Haiti, Liberia and Sudan.  Simultaneously, the United Nations has increased its disarmament, demobilization and reintegration engagement in non-peacekeeping contexts, such as Afghanistan, Central African Republic, Congo, Indonesia (Aceh), Niger, Somalia, Solomon Islands and Uganda.


This extensive experience has fostered a body of knowledge about the specific needs of key groups, including female combatants, children associated with armed conflict, and cross-cutting issues like gender, HIV/AIDS, and health.  In parallel, attention has increasingly been paid to the longer-term requirements for stability, based on a growing awareness of the link between successful disarmament and demobilization and genuine and lasting opportunities for ex-combatants to reintegrate into their peacetime communities.


The new Integrated Disarmament, Demobilization and Reintegration Standards acknowledge the difficulty of transforming individuals who have been scarred by conflict, in some cases for years or even decades, into productive members of their societies.  In order to ease the transition, the Standards call for measures to provide psycho-social counselling, job training, educational opportunities and mechanisms to promote reconciliation in the communities where they return.


Jointly developed, over the past two years, by staff members from peacekeeping missions, United Nations country teams and Headquarters, the Standards are being launched together with three accompanying tools that will ensure their widespread application:


-- The Operational Guide aims to help users find their way through the IDDRS by briefly explaining the key guidance in each area, highlighting practical steps for the planning, implementation and evaluation of disarmament, demobilization and reintegration programmes;


-- The Briefing Note for Senior Managers contains key strategic and policy guidance; and


-- The web-based DDR Resource Centre (www.unddr.org) includes all of these documents, and serves as the United Nations “one-stop shop” for all related information.


“We’ve learned that, while different combatants in various contexts may have similar concerns and needs, there are also many specific factors that must be taken into account,” explained Jean-Marie Guéhenno, Under-Secretary-General for Peacekeeping Operations.  “A child soldier must be reunited with his family, while a person living with HIV/AIDS will have particular health concerns that require attention.”


“By refining our approach to DDR,” he continued, “We can better help each ex-combatant to ultimately reintegrate into society, so that they can go from being a cause of insecurity to a force for growing stability in countries urgently in need of committed people who can contribute to the rebuilding process.”


Also participating in the launch was Kathleen Cravero, Assistant Administrator of the United Nations Development Programme (UNDP), who said that a common approach to disarmament, demobilization and reintegration in the United Nations system is a basic requirement for cooperation with its international and local partners.  “Whether in Afghanistan or Haiti or Sudan, we must operate based on a coherent set of principles.  This new set of standards is a system-wide accumulation of our disarmament, demobilization and reintegration knowledge and experience.  It is a concrete example of how the United Nations can deliver as one!”


The launch was simultaneously held in New York and Geneva.  In both locations, the launch of the IDDRS was followed by a panel discussion, including statements by representatives of Sierra Leone and Sweden on national or international initiatives on disarmament, demobilization and reintegration.


For more information, contact Nick Birnback, e-mail:  birnbackn@un.org, tel.:  917 367 5044; or Donato Kiniger-Passigli, e-mail:  kiniger@ilo.org, tel.:  41 22 799 6834.


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For information media • not an official record
For information media. Not an official record.