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News Every Day |

Unficyp at 62: why peacekeeping still matters for Cyprus

By Khassim Diagne

For many people in Cyprus today, the United Nations Peacekeeping Force in Cyprus – Unficyp – feels like a familiar part of the landscape. The buffer zone, the blue helmets, the patrols through rural villages and in the narrow streets of old Nicosia are all woven into everyday life.

Yet it is easy to forget that these are not fixtures of the island – they are safeguards. They exist because they are still needed.

On March 4, 1964, the UN Security Council adopted resolution 186 in response to intercommunal tensions that threatened to spiral into further violence. The mission it established aimed to restore calm, prevent renewed fighting, and create space for mediation toward a peaceful settlement.

Sixty‑two years later, Unficyp remains not out of routine, but because maintaining stability still requires careful, constant stewardship.

Peacekeeping rarely makes headlines when it is successful. Its achievements are often the crises that never unfold, the confrontations quietly defused, or the misunderstandings resolved before they harden into conflict.

Every day, Unficyp’s military, police and civilian personnel engage with both sides to prevent escalation and maintain calm in and around the buffer zone. This steady, impartial presence has helped avoid serious flareups for decades.

But stability – important as it is – is not the same as peace. Peacekeepers were never meant to be a permanent feature of Cyprus. Their presence is meant to support space for dialogue, compromise and progress toward a political settlement.

That responsibility rests with the leaders and people of Cyprus themselves. The United Nations remains committed to assisting, but the island’s future must be shaped here.

Although the context has evolved over six decades, the core purpose of Unficyp remains constant. The mission continues to reduce tensions, facilitate humanitarian activities and keep essential channels of communication open.

In moments of heightened sensitivity, this regular liaison and impartial presence can be the difference between calm management and unintended escalation.

Unficyp’s work goes beyond patrols. The mission supports intercommunal initiatives, engages communities, and encourages cooperation on practical issues – efforts that may appear modest but are essential to building trust. Peace is not achieved only at negotiating tables; it is nurtured in everyday interactions between people.

This anniversary is also a moment of solemn remembrance. Since 1964, 187 men and women serving with Unficyp have lost their lives in the service of peace. They came from different nations and backgrounds, united by a commitment to help protect communities in times of fragility. Their sacrifice reminds us that peacekeeping is never abstract – it is carried out by individuals who serve far from home so others can live in greater safety.

Around the world, UN peacekeeping faces complex challenges, often in demanding environments with limited resources. The continued support of the Security Council for Unficyp reflects its recognition that stability in Cyprus remains vital, both for the island and for the region. Prevention is one of the international community’s most effective investments.

Sixty‑two years is a long chapter in any story. It is natural to ask why peacekeepers are still needed. The answer lies in the realities on the ground. Until a comprehensive political settlement is reached, an impartial international presence continues to provide reassurance, predictability, and stability.

As we mark the anniversary of Security Council resolution 186, we reaffirm our commitment to the people of Cyprus. We honour the 187 peacekeepers who gave their lives in the service of peace.

And we continue our work – patient, impartial and steady – to help ensure that calm endures as the search for a just and lasting settlement continues.

Peacekeeping has helped Cyprus avoid a return to violence for more than six decades. The hope that one day it will no longer be needed is precisely why it must remain until peace is achieved.

Khassim Diagne is the Special Representative of the Secretary-General (SRSG) in Cyprus & Head of Unficyp

Ria.city






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