By Cecilia Ologunagba
South Africa has moved to withdraw its peacekeepers deployed at the United Nations Organisation Stabilisation Mission in the Democratic Republic of the Congo (MONUSCO) after nearly three decades of service.
President Cyril Ramaphosa, inย a statement, said he informed UN ย Secretary-General Antonio Guterres on January 12 about the decision,.
According to him, the decision isย influenced by the need to consolidate and realign the resources of the South African Nationalย Defenceย Force, followingย 27ย years of South Africaโs support to UN peacekeeping efforts in the DRC.โ
He said that South Africa was among the top 10 countries contributing troops to MONUSCO with over 700 soldiers.
In response, MONUSCO, expressed deep gratitude to the Government and people of South Africa โfor their steadfast commitment over several decades to United Nations peacekeeping, as well as for the dedication demonstrated by South African peacekeepers in support of the Missionโs mandate.
โThe Mission โlooks forward to continuing to engage with the Republic of South Africa on broader peacekeeping issues, including lessons learned and continued support to efforts aimed at advancing peace and stability.โ
It also will work closely with the UN Secretariat and relevant stakeholders to ensure that any transition related to the withdrawal โis managed in a safe, orderly, and responsible manner, in line with United Nations standards and operational requirements.โ
The UN Secretary-General also expressed thanks to South Africa for its longtime commitmentย and sacrifice, his Spokesman, Stรฉphane Dujarric, told journalists in New York on Monday.
MONUSCOย has been in the DRC since July 2010, takingย over from ย an earlier UN keeping operation that supervised implementation ofย a ceasefire agreement following conflict in the east stemming from the 1994 genocide inย neighbouringย Rwanda.
Several regional countries and armed groupsย wereย involved inย the fighting,ย alsoย known as the Great War of Africa.
MONUSCOโsย mandate includesย protectingย civilians andย helping the DRCย toย stabilizeย andย consolidateย peace.
More than 12,400 personnelย were serving at the Missionย as of October 2025, including some 9,177 troops and 926 police officers fromย over 50 countries. Sinceย inception, 304 fatalities haveย been recorded.
MONUSCO paidย tributeย โto South African peacekeepers who lost their lives under the United Nations flag in the service of peace in the Democratic Republic of the Congo andย honoursย their sacrifice.โ
The head of UN Peace Operations, JeanโPierre Lacroix, is currently in the DRC where on Monday he met with President Fรฉlix Tshisekedi, Prime Minister Judithย Suminwaย Tuluka, key members of the Government, and relevant stakeholders.
Discussionsย centredย around implementation of the MONUSCO mandate, including support to a permanent ceasefire.
Lacroix will then go to Beni in North Kivu province, eastern DRC, where he will assess recent developments and meet with provincial authorities as well as peacekeepers deployed in the area.
Later this week, he will head to Ethiopiaย for the annual African Union summit, taking place in the capital, Addisย Ababa.ย (NAN) (www.nannews.ng)
Edited by Bashir Rabe Mani











