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U.N. Wants NYC Cops for
Peacekeeping
AP | April 12, 2007
Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon
asked New York Mayor Michael Bloomberg on Wednesday whether some of
the city's police officers could be deployed with U.N. peacekeeping
missions.
Recruiting police for the U.N.'s 16 peacekeeping missions around the
globe has been historically challenging.
"New York City has one of the most
diversified police forces around and I think the secretary-general
would like to explore possibilities," U.N. deputy spokeswoman Marie
Okabe said before the meeting. "Getting police to join peacekeeping
operations is one of the high priorities for the U.N."
Bloomberg left the meeting without
speaking to reporters. Stu Loeser, the mayor's spokesman, said his
office had no comment.
New York City has recently fallen
short of its police recruiting goals so it's unclear if it would
have any officers to spare for international peacekeeping.
The U.N. peacekeeping department
said 321 American police officers are currently involved in missions
abroad, primarily training local police. Of those, 225 are in the
Kosovo region of Yugoslavia, and others are in Haiti, Liberia and
Sudan.
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