United Nations honour Indian peacekeepers in Sudan

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United Nations: One hundred and fifty Indian peacekeepers serving with the UN Mission in South Sudan (UNMISS) have received medals of honour for their dedicated service and sacrifice.

“A glimpse beyond the dedicated Service and Sacrifice of the @UN blue beret – Indian peacekeepers receive medals of honour in Malakal -@India Be Proud,” the UN mission tweeted Monday, along with pictures of the Indian peacekeepers participating in a parade and receiving the medals for their exemplary service.

Colonel Amit Gupta, deployed with UNMISS in Malakal, was among the recipients of the medal of honour. A UNMISS news article said Gupta commands a battalion of 850 soldiers in the Upper Nile region of South Sudan. Under his command, his men have conducted highly sought-after veterinary camps and run a veterinary hospital in Malakal, with a second expected to be completed in Kodok – a major town along the west bank of the Nile – in a few weeks time.

“I want to be remembered as having left positive memories for the people in South Sudan,” Gupta is quoted as saying in the UNMISS article. “I also want to leave them in a better place, where they are able to generate income for themselves and build their country.”

Indian peacekeepers serving with the mission have undertaken numerous training sessions of community animal health workers, providing value addition training for farmers to help them make the most of their produce.

“If a group of volunteers in India can come together and create one of the largest milk production entities in our country, then surely, it can be done here as well,” Gupta is quoted as saying in the same article. “If even 10 per cent of our trainees apply what they’ve learnt, this country (Sudan) will be better for it.”

Gupta has previously served the United Nations in Northern Kivu, in the Democratic Republic of Congo.

Private Ankush Cheema, another recipient of the medal of honour, had joined the unit in 2017 when he found out that they were scheduled for a peacekeeping mission. “I grew up near Kashmir where several Indian Army units are based and so I consider myself an Army boy,” he states in the UNMISS article.

“Besides this, my father and grandfather before him were both Army men. They however, never got to participate in a peacekeeping mission,” he adds.

Earlier in a tweet, UNMISS had said that the Indian Horizontal Mobility Engineering Company serving with the mission completed the renovation of 145 km of roadway connecting Bentiu and Leer ‘easing the way for the delivery humanitarian aid, trade and inter-communal dialogue’.

It should be stated here that India is one of the top troop contributing countries to UN peacekeeping missions. More than 2,00,000 military and police have served over the past 70 years and 168 Indian military personnel have lost their lives under the UN flag.

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