United Nations Peacekeeping Forces - meaning and definition. What is United Nations Peacekeeping Forces
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What (who) is United Nations Peacekeeping Forces - definition

ASPECT OF HISTORY
History of United Nations peacekeeping missions; History of united nations peacekeeping missions; History of United Nations Peacekeeping
  • Alpine Helicopters contract [[Bell 212]] on MINUGUA peacekeeping duty in Guatemala, 1998
  • [[Brazil]]ian MINUSTAH soldier with a Haitian girl.
  • UNTAG]] being unloaded in [[Namibia]].
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  • Potočari]], [[Bosnia and Herzegovina]]. July 2007.
  • UN Soldiers in Eritrea as part of UNMEE. Photo by Dawit Rezene

blue helmet         
THE MONITORING AND OBSERVATION OF PEACE PROCESSES IN POST-CONFLICT AREAS
UN peacekeeping; UN Peacekeeping; United Nations Peace-Keeping Forces; UN Peacekeeper; United Nations Peacekeeping Forces; Blue helmets; United Nations Peacekeeping; Blue Helmets; Blue Helmet; UN Peace Keeping Forces; UN peacekeeping operations; UN Peacekeeping Operations; UN Peacekeeping Forces; United Nations Peace Keeping Force; UN peacekeeping forces; UN Peacekeepers; UN peacekeepers; United Nations peacekeepers; UN Peace keepers; UN Peacekeeping forces; UN Peace Keeping Operation; U.N. peacekeepers; United Nations Peacekeeping Force; UN peacekeeper; United Nations peacekeeping force; Blue helmet; U.N. peacekeeping operations; U.N. peacekeeping; U.N. Peacekeeping; Human rights violations in United Nations peacekeeping missions; Human rights abuses by UN peacekeepers
¦ noun a member of a United Nations peacekeeping force.
History of United Nations peacekeeping         
The United Nations Peacekeeping efforts began in 1948. Its first activity was in the Middle East to observe and maintain the ceasefire during the 1948 Arab–Israeli War.
peacekeeping         
  • Members of the [[Azerbaijani peacekeeping forces]] in full combat uniform during the [[2020 Moscow Victory Day Parade]].
  • Sinai]], [[Egypt]], 1989.
  • Norwegian]] Peacekeeper during the [[Siege of Sarajevo]], 1992 - 1993, photo by [[Mikhail Evstafiev]].
  • Ghanaian women serve as UN Peacekeepers
  • Irish [[UNMIL]] troops on patrol in Liberia, July 2006
  • Memorial in [[Kigali]], Rwanda, to ten Belgian peacekeepers of [[UNAMIR]] who were massacred by Hutu paramilitaries in 1994
  • [[United Nations]] peacekeeping missions as of 2012
ACTIVITIES INTENDED TO CREATE CONDITIONS THAT FAVOUR LASTING PEACE
Peace-keeping; Peacekeeping Force; Peace keeping; Peace Mission; UN force; International Peace and Security; Peace keeping forces; Peacekeeping forces; Peace keeping force; Peacekeeping operations; Peacekeeping Operations; Peacekeeping operation; Peace Keeping; Peace-kept; Peacekeeping force; UN Force; United Nations Force; UN forces; U.N. forces; United Nations Forces; Peace support measures
also peace-keeping
A peacekeeping force is a group of soldiers that is sent to a country where there is war or fighting, in order to try to prevent more violence. Peacekeeping forces are usually made up of troops from several different countries.
...the possibilities of a UN peacekeeping force monitoring the ceasefire in the country.
N-UNCOUNT: usu N n

Wikipedia

History of United Nations peacekeeping

The United Nations Peacekeeping efforts began in 1948. Its first activity was in the Middle East to observe and maintain the ceasefire during the 1948 Arab–Israeli War. Since then, United Nations peacekeepers have taken part in a total of 72 missions around the globe, 12 of which continue today. The peacekeeping force as a whole received the Nobel Peace Prize in 1988.

Though the term "peacekeeping" is not found in the United Nations Charter, the authorization is generally considered to lie in (or between) Chapter 6 and Chapter 7. Chapter 6 describes the Security Council's power to investigate and mediate disputes, while Chapter 7 discusses the power to authorize economic, diplomatic, and military sanctions, as well as the use of military force, to resolve disputes. The founders of the UN envisioned that the organization would act to prevent conflicts between nations and make future wars impossible; however, the outbreak of the Cold War made peacekeeping agreements extremely difficult due to the division of the world into hostile camps. Following the end of the Cold War, there were renewed calls for the UN to become the agency for achieving world peace, and the agency's peacekeeping dramatically increased, authorizing more missions between 1991 and 1994 than in the previous 45 years combined.

Examples of use of United Nations Peacekeeping Forces
1. Anis Bajwa heads United Nations’ peacekeeping forces.
2. Pellegrini, a French national, commands the United Nations peacekeeping forces in Lebanon, known as UNIFIL.
3. The seaport has not been operational since 1''5, when United Nations peacekeeping forces left Somalia amid rising political and clan–based violence.
4. In the Americas, Brazil leads United Nations peacekeeping forces in Haiti –– a nation so desperately in need of the justice, education, health, prosperity and opportunity we all seek.
5. "All of you have the greatest honor, to be written down in the Cambodian history _ for the first time ever _ as the United Nations peacekeeping forces," Prime Minister Hun Sen said during the Wednesday ceremony.