UN Peacekeeping Force – 1991

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UN Peacekeeping Force – 1991

1991

Intermediate Implementation Intermediate implementation

The Secretary-General recommended that the Security Council authorize the United Nations Advance Mission in Cambodia (UNAMIC) to become operational as soon as the Paris Agreement was signed in October 1991. The Security Council, in its Resolution 717 (1991) of October 16, 1991, authorized UNAMIC as recommended by the Secretary-General. UNAMIC became operational on November 9, 1991 when Mr. A.H.S. Ataul Karim (Bangladesh) assumed his functions as Chief Liaison Officer of UNAMIC in Phnom Penh. Brigadier-General Michel Loridon (France), Senior Military Liaison Officer, assumed command of the military elements of UNAMIC on 12 November and, on the same day, an air operations unit contributed by France arrived in Phnom Penh. UNAMIC was designed to be absorbed into United Nations Transitional Authority in Cambodia (UNTAC) once UNTAC was established. UNAMIC’s initial authorized strength was 116 military personnel (50 military liaison officers, 20 mine-awareness personnel, 40 military support personnel); there was also provision for approximately 75 international and 75 local civilian support staff.1

  1. “Cambodia: UNAMIC Facts and Figures,” accessed July 22, 2010, http://www.un.org/en/peacekeeping/missions/past/unamicfacts.html.