When Mali recently called for a UN peacekeeping force to depart the country “without delay,” it was the latest sign of unease in parts of Africa over the role of the so-called Blue Helmet operations. Mali Foreign Minister Abdoulaye Diop last month called for the UN Security Council to withdraw peacekeepers from his country “without delay”, denouncing their “failure” to meet security challenges. The UN Security Council, which was due to vote on the renewal of the mission’s mandate on June 29, is likely to agree to Mali’s request, according to diplomatic sources. A draft resolution, which will have to be approved by the Council, “acknowledges the withdrawal” and refers to a six-month period to organize the departure of around 12,000 military and police personnel, a source told AFP. The mission has been in “persistent crisis” since Mali’s military coup in 2020, Anjali Dayal, a professor at Fordham University in New York City, told AFP. Mali’s military has increasingly imposed operational restrictions on the peacekeepers, demanding that the mission instead tackles terror groups in the country. The landlocked Sahel state has been battling a security crisis since militant and separatist insurgencies broke out in 2012. “It’s not the only mission in the world to have host state problems,” Dayal said. Blue Helmet forces have also faced friction in the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC), the Central African Republic and South Sudan. In the DRC, anti-UN demonstrations have repeatedly broken out over the years, while the government has called for an “accelerated” departure of the UN’s mission there. “There is a ‘consent crisis’ in several African countries,” Patryk Labuda of the University of Zurich told AFP. “Populations and governments are not satisfied with the services provided by the Blue Helmets”, but for different reasons in each country, he added. Richard Gowan, of the International Crisis Group, told AFP that “the Blue Helmets are finding it difficult to play a role in the persistent violence” in the DRC, South Sudan and Mali. “The local population often views UN units with skepticism and contempt,” he said. “I think that some governments in Africa think that the UN wastes too much time talking about human rights and too little time killing off troublesome insurgents.”