BeaverFever BeaverFever:
Martin15 Martin15:
This is what the UN does..
“The UN” didn’t do any of that. Soldiers from the countries participating in the mission did. Uruguay, Chile, Argentina,
Canada and France,
If Canadian soldiers were involved those individuals and thei Canadian Armed Forces should be held accountable. Of course that’s not convenient to your ideology.
But as is being demonstrated on the Mali mission thread that you’re hiding from you clearly have no idea what you’re talking about when it comes to UN missions.

If this was an isolated incident i'd agree but it isn't. This epidemic has been going on for decades now and the UN is culpable because they continue to recruit from countries that refuse to abide by their rules and regulations.
In this case shit rolls up hill so ultimately the UN is responsible for the discipline of their troops in the field. They've even gone so far as to publish Standards of Conduct for Peacekeepers. A publication they're willing to ignore because they'd rather allow some children to be raped and murdered than lose that countries vote.
https://peacekeeping.un.org/en/standards-of-conductBesides it's not just the peacekeepers who are the problem it's the UN itself and here are just a few of the examples of how good a job the UN is doing in keeping it's own people in line.
$1:
There are also allegations that some male senior officials at the charity were using prostituted women and girls in Chad in 2006. Many men working in developing countries consider using women in this way as a “perk of the job”. We know that many sex markets in countries such as the Philippines exist because of the presence of the military and so-called “peacekeepers”.
These men are enabling terrible human rights violations. They are literally propping up a system that causes misery and heartache for women and children. There have been numerous cases of child sexual abuse and human trafficking inside Haiti’s orphanages following the earthquake, and some young women have spoken about the desperation and poverty that led them to street prostitution.
https://www.independent.co.uk/voices/ox ... 06646.html$1:
Last February the Charity Commission launched an investigation into Oxfam's operations in Haiti, Chad and Liberia as part of a wide-scale inquiry into aid workers' conduct overseas.
The charity's bosses were also hauled before MPs for a separate probe into allegations of sexual misconduct by its staff.
The developments came as Oxfam admitted rehiring one of the workers sacked over the initial Haiti sex scandal.
When the report was published in June this year, there were found to be 'serious problems with the culture, morale and behaviour' of Oxfam staff in Haiti.
https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/articl ... abies.htmlBy the way in the last article there were Canadian Peacekeepers who were involved in the same shit as the ones from the other countries. So, were they ever punished?