Private Military Contractors

Professional Overseas Contractors

Humanitarians and Private Security Companies: Time for Dialogue

By Jean S. Renouf — WELL AHEAD OF his time, Jean Marguin wrote, as early as 2000, “It is not out of the question to believe that the armed defence of most countries in the world, the missions of collective security entrusted to international organizations and the protection of NGOs’ humanitarian operations will one day be provided by private military - humanitarian multinationals”. We are not quite there yet, but we aren’t far off. While Blackwater recently proposed sending brigade-sized rapid reaction forces to support or replace peacekeepers in war zones, Pacific Architects and Engineers and Medical Support Solutions in fact did provide logistical support as well as medical services for the African Union in Sudan in 2002-2003.

Continue Reading ▼

Professional Overseas Contractors

by  — The unsubstantiated rumours of the private security company STTEP (Specialised Tasks, Training, Equipment and Protection International) being redeployed to Nigeria have yet to generate the furore that their initial deployment did in 2015. The earlier presence of STTEP prompted the South African government to label them as ‘mercenary’ in function and nature and therefore in contravention of existing domestic and international legal mechanisms. Other commentators took a broader view and characterised their arrival in northern Nigeria as a “logical step” (and as an act of desperation) following the poor performance of the Nigerian Defence Force (NDF) in their operations against Boko Haram.

Continue Reading ▼

Professional Overseas Contractors
The Russian cabinet has rejected a bill regulating the work of private military companies because of legal weaknesses and security fears, Izvestia reports, citing the author of the document.

The main sponsor of the bill, MP Gennady Nosovko of the center-left party Fair Russia was disappointed at its rejection. However, he has promised to rework the draft and submit it again in November. He added that he did not agree with many of the government’s conclusions regarding their review of his bill, but refused to go into detail.

Continue Reading ▼