Trudeau visits peacekeepers in Mali, defends decision not to extend mission

GAO, Mali – Prime Minister Justin Trudeau is returning from Mali this evening after paying a surprise visit to Canadian peacekeepers at their hot and dusty UN base there only days before Christmas.

The trip was Trudeau’s first and likely only visit to the West African nation, where about 250 Canadian peacekeepers have been providing lifesaving medical evacuations and transporting equipment and personnel.

After watching a mock evacuation and serving the peacekeepers a pre-Christmas dinner, Trudeau told the troops they were continuing the Canadian military’s long tradition of helping around the world.

“For all of you here not celebrating Christmases with your family, there is a family back home not celebrating their Christmases with you, and we need to think about the sacrifices that you and your families make in order to serve Canada in such an extraordinary way,” the prime minister told the troops.

Yet even as he emphasized the importance of bringing peace to Mali, the prime minister defended his government’s refusal to extend Canada’s mission by several months next summer.

Romanian peacekeepers will take over in Mali next year, but they aren’t expected to arrive until several months after the Canadians have stopped operations.

Sources say the United Nations wants Canada to extend its mission to prevent a gap.

“We are very much working with the United Nations to ensure that the transition happens smoothly and we are confident, and we hearing from the UN, that there isn’t a real concern about that gap being a problem,” Trudeau commented.

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