Denmark supports Ghana to document peacekeeping experiences

 

Accra, 30th June: The Danish Institute for International Studies (DIIS) and the Kofi Annan International Peacekeeping Training Centre (KAIPTC) have embarked on a project to document Ghana’s peacekeeping experiences to guide research and policy formulation.

The Peacekeeping History Project forms part of the broader objectives of the Domestic Security Implications of Peacekeeping (D-SIP) Project, which seeks to generate new knowledge on the domestic security implications of Ghana’s UN peacekeeping experiences.

Sponsored by the Danish Ministry of Foreign Affairs, the D-SIP also seeks to demonstrate the possible correlations (both positive and negative) between global peacekeeping engagements, its impacts on legitimate security institutions and how such experiences contribute to behavioural change and become drivers of stability.

As part of the Project, the DIIS in collaboration with the KAIPTC organised a workshop in Accra from 28th to 30th June, 2022 on the topic: “Ghana’s Peacekeeping Experience: Recording History”.

The workshop provided a platform for participants – mainly former and current peacekeepers – to share their peacekeeping experiences to contribute to enhancing the understanding of peacekeeping in the public domain.

The three-day engagement gathered varied experiences and testimonials of former and current peacekeepers and identified lessons from the perspectives of peacekeepers.

The workshop is expected to produce an original publication on aspects of Ghana’s Peacekeeping History.

Speaking to journalists at the opening of the workshop on Tuesday, June 28, 2022, Dr. Peter Albrecht, Senior Researcher, DIIS, described Ghana as an important contributor to peacekeeping operations and commended the country for contributing more personnel to peacekeeping operations over the years.

He said the Project would help to understand Ghana’s role in peacekeeping and the impact of those operations on the country in various dimensions.

“It is important to understand what peacekeeping does to the people that are going and also to the institutions that are sending these security personnel,” Dr Albrecht said.

Air Commodore George Arko-Dadzie, who opened the workshop, said since the deployment of the first Ghanaian peacekeeping contingent in 1960, Ghana had progressively earned a good reputation for its participation in international peacekeeping and contributions to global peace.

He said Ghana is now the ninth largest troop contributing country (TCC) to UN missions, adding that the country has also contributed to other regional peace operations under aegis of the original sub-regional Economic Community of West African States Monitoring Group (ECOMOG).

He said peacekeeping served as a public good in terms of Ghana’s efforts to contribute to the maintenance of international peace and stability, but also as a force multiplier for domestic stability.

“Peacekeeping has provided substantial benefits in terms of economic gain, career development, professionalization, logistics benefiting Ghana as country, the GAF as institution and individual personnel in particular,” Air Commodore Arko-Dadzie said.

He said, given the increasing complexity of conflicts, operations involved in their management and resolution required the execution of an increasingly broad spectrum of tasks by the military.

He indicated however, that the use of the military in conflict resolution should be balanced and integrated with other instruments of power.

“The traditional use of military forces in the context of conflict resolution seems to be undergoing rapid evolution, where its action is developed in a much more complex environment,” he said.

Professor Kwesi Aning, the Director, Faculty of Academic Affairs & Research, KAIPTC, underscored the need to understand that peacekeeping had shifted more directly to the centre stage of Ghana’s diplomatic military engagements.

He said the shift required more thinking to refine the potential for Ghana as a new and positive international actor.

“Transforming our identify from a troop contributor to a peacekeeper requires the elevation of the Ghanaian peacekeeping from the functional imperative to a cognitive orientation that provides an intellectual contextual framework for shaping our elite perceptions and policies around conflict, peace and security,” he said.