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Austrian Troops in Chad
Mission to Africa
It's tough for the soldiers, of course, but perhaps even harder for
the families left behind. Martin says his parents were dead-set against
him joining the mission to Africa and that he had spent a lot of time
with them trying to explain his reasons for going. And what are those
reasons? "There's so much poverty, so much misery down there. And
I think that as a medic that's where I should be. That's where I can
make a real difference"
By CHRISTIAN CUMMINS
from Wien, AUSTRIA
It's a grey January morning and a military band leads the Austrian Guard
of Honour into the pinkish brick-walled courtyard of the defence ministry
with a jaunty march that defies the weather. The ceremonial guard, elegantly
dressed in long green winter coats, are here to give the 160 Austrian
troops (and one dog) headed on a peace-keeping mission to Chad an adequate
farewell.
The Africa bound troops, who are standing to attention in front of
the northern wall of the courtyard wearing sand-coloured fatigues (which
look slightly scruffy in the shadow of the Guard of Honour), will serve
beside 3,500 other European Union (EUFOR) soldiers in central Africa.
They have an initial 12 months mandate to protecting aid workers and
refugees fleeing violence in the neighbouring Darfur region of Sudan.
Even in the judgement of the Irish commander of the peacekeepers, Lt.
General Pat Nash, it is a mammoth and potentially risky mission.
A gaggle of photographers rushes aside to make way for the marching
troops. You feel this is an as much a PR event as a true military ceremony.
The public has been very wary about the mission to a far-off a dangerous
country. The tabloid press has been particularly scathing about the
value of a mission so far from Austria's borders and, in parliament,
the opposition Green Party, through security spokesman Peter Pilz, has
been very vocal in criticising what it sees as the government's strategy
and logistical oversights. Among the concerns he listed: "No-one
can speak decent French."
The Social Democrat Defence Minister Norbert Darabos, the man who has
decided to send them to Chad, is all too aware of that scepticism. After
a speech in which he highlights the desperate plight of the central
African refugees and calls the troop-deployment a "true humanitarian
mission", and emphasising that the troops deserve "support,
recognition and respect", he goes through the ranks shaking each
of the deployed soldiers by the hand and thanking them individually
for their commitment.
So how does it feel to be responsible for the contentious decision
to deploy the troops? I put that question to the Minister when he had
finished his tour of gratitude. He said he was concerned but confident
about the troop's safety, admitting that there was a certain danger
inherent in any such overseas mission, but pointing out that the risk
was considered lower than comparable mission in Afghanistan. He added
that, contrary to criticism, his ministry had done everything to give
the troops an optimal training for the mission (this had included apparently
lessons in the wilder elements of Chadian fauna at the Schönbrunn zoo)
and concluded that the troops were "determined and well-prepared."
Certainly the first soldier I speak to, Major Manfred Brandl, reflected
the minister's confidence. "I volunteered so that could achieve
our goal of bringing humanitarian support to the people in Chad,"
he tells me, in the fashion of a man well-versed in dealing with the
press, "so I'm looking forward to the mission." But as the
soldiers relaxed after the parade, young army medic, who wants to be
named only by his first name Martin, admits he has reservations; "I'm
very nervous. We don't know what to expect down there. It's a foreign
country and a foreign culture. I've never been to Africa: I only know
it from it from the Atlas." It's the heat that he is the most worried
about; the troops are leaving Austria in mid-winter and arriving in
a desert-like country where day time temperatures often top the 40 degree
Celsius mark.
It's tough for the soldiers, of course, but perhaps even harder for
the families left behind. Martin says his parents were dead-set against
him joining the mission to Africa and that he had spent a lot of time
with them trying to explain his reasons for going. And what are those
reasons? "There's so much poverty, so much misery down there. And
I think that as a medic that's where I should be. That's where I can
make a real difference."
Believing that their loved ones are doing a worthwhile job under the
African sun can sometimes be a great consolation to the family left
behind. Relatives of the dispatched soldiers have been invited to the
ceremony (and to a meal of goulash a beer afterwards), and a thin row
of them are now watching the parade from the side-lines, clasping plastic
cups of sweet black tea or snapping away with digital cameras. Elisabeth
Schell is among them. She married a Chad-bound soldier, another medic,
only last Friday and tells me that she is very proud of what her husband
has committed to doing. When she speaks, her words are accompanied by
a smile that is both endearing and obviously anxious. The nobility of
her husband's cause is a consolation that only goes so far: "It
is a very queasy feeling. We've agreed not to telephone too often, perhaps
just once a week, and not to set a fix time for the calls, so that we're
not overly worried if one of us can't make it to the phone."
Major Manfred Brandl recognises what Frau Schell is going through.
He says that the best way to reassure relatives is to give them as much
information as possible about the situation in Chad and to keep that
information flowing throughout the length of the mission. Elisabeth
Schell says feels she has been very well looked after by the military.
She has been given folders with mobile phone numbers she can reach 24
hours a day if there is a problem. But she adds, as the anxious smile
transforms into an anxious laughter: "I haven't given it any thought.
I simply don't like to think of anything going wrong."
(Published: 10.02.2008.)
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