Freed UN peacekeepers arrive in Jordan

Officials say troops to remain in Syria despite abduction of 21 soldiers

The Filipino peacekeepers - part of the UN Disengagement Observer Force that  has been monitoring a ceasefire line between Syria and Israel in the Golan Heights since 1974 - were seized by the Martyrs of Yarmouk rebel brigade on Wednesday. Photograph: Muhammad Hamed/Reuters
The Filipino peacekeepers - part of the UN Disengagement Observer Force that has been monitoring a ceasefire line between Syria and Israel in the Golan Heights since 1974 - were seized by the Martyrs of Yarmouk rebel brigade on Wednesday. Photograph: Muhammad Hamed/Reuters

The Philippines remains committed to deploying troops in UN peacekeeping hotspots despite the brief hostage-taking of 21 of its soldiers, military officials have said.

The unarmed Filipino peacekeepers were abducted after providing water and food to other troops on Wednesday in southern Syria near the Israeli-occupied Golan Heights.

They were taken by one of the rebel groups fighting Syrian president Bashar Assad's regime. After negotiations, they were freed yesterday on Jordan's border and taken to a hotel in Amman, Philippine officials said.

At the hotel, the peacekeepers, who said they were treated well by the rebels, were welcomed with a “boodle fight” — a Philippine military mess-hall style of eating, where food is laid usually on banana leaves atop a long table and soldiers eat with their hands, said army Col Roberto Arcan, who heads the military’s peacekeeping operations centre in Manila.

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Col Arcan said he talked on the phone with one of the freed peacekeepers, army Maj Dominador Valerio, who remained in high spirits despite the four-day ordeal. “Please tell my wife I’m OK,” Arcan quoted Valerio as saying, adding he relayed the good news to the army officer’s wife in the Philippines.

Prior to last week’s hostage-taking, a Filipino army major and his driver was briefly held at a checkpoint in the Golan Heights by anti-Assad forces last January but were released after about four hours, Arcan said.

The freed peacekeepers from a 326-member Filipino contingent in the Golan Heights are part of a UN mission known as Undof that was set up to monitor a cease-fire in 1974, seven years after Israel captured the plateau and a year after it pushed back Syrian troops trying to recapture the territory.

The truce’s stability has been shaken in recent months, as Syrian mortar shells have hit the Israeli-controlled Golan Heights, sparking worries among Israeli officials that the violence may prompt UNDOF to end its mission.

On Friday, UN spokesman Martin Nesirky said “the mission in the Golan needs to review its security arrangements and it has been doing that”.

Asked if the incident would prompt the Philippines to withdraw its peacekeeping personnel, military spokesman Col Arnulfo Burgos said deployments would continue although assessments would be made to better safeguard the peacekeepers in increasingly-hostile areas.

“This is a global commitment,” Col Burgos said in a news conference in Manila.

More than 600 Philippine security personnel are deployed in nine UN peacekeeping areas worldwide, Col Arcan said.

President Benigno Aquino III said last week he has asked the military to assess whether large numbers of Filipino peacekeepers should be reduced to help address the country's growing security needs.

“There is a delicate balance,” he said. “All of these deployments have a vital function. We are part of a global community. If there’s peace in the Middle East, it also helps us.”

But he asked: “Can we afford to send this number of people?”

AP