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In 2014, India was the third largest troop contributor (TCC), with 7,860 personnel deployed, of which 995 were police personnel, including the first UN Female Formed Police Unit, serving with ten UN peacekeeping missions. [102] [103] As of 30 June 2014, 157 Indians have been killed during such missions. [104]
India has been the largest troop contributor to UN missions since their inception. [294] So far India has taken part in 43 peacekeeping missions with a total contribution exceeding 160,000 troops and a significant number of police personnel having been deployed.
Indonesia: 2707 2589 118 9.70 7 Ghana: 2641 2204 437 85.66 8 China: 1870 1801 69 1.33 9 Morocco: 1710 1661 49 46.19 10 Egypt: 1635 1531 104 15.65 11 Tanzania: 1537 1381 156 26.51 12 Ethiopia: 1512 1252 260 14.09 13 Senegal: 1230 1051 179 67.30 14 South Africa: 1143 910 233 18.43 15 Cameroon: 1104 979 125 39.30 16 Uruguay: 1001 940 61 290.63 17 ...
The following are the Indian contributions to the United Nations Peacekeeping Missions since 1950. (a) Korea (1950–54): 60th Indian Field Ambulance, a Parachute-trained Medical Unit composed of 17 officers, 9 JCOs and 300 other ranks was deployed in the Korean War from November 1950 till July 1954, the longest tenure by any unit under the UN flag.
According to the Indian Ministry of External Affairs, there were about 120,000 people of Indian origin as well as 9,000 Indian nationals living and working in Indonesia as of January 2012. [3] Most of them were concentrated in the province of North Sumatra and urban areas such as Banda Aceh, Surabaya, Medan, and Jakarta. However, it is quite ...
India is the largest contributor of troops to United Nations peacekeeping missions with 7,860 personnel deployed with ten UN Peacekeeping Missions as of 2014 after Bangladesh and Pakistan, [36] [37] all three nations being in South Asia. India has contributed more than 180,000 troops, the largest number from any country, participated in more ...
India and Indonesia established diplomatic relations on 16 April 1949. [1] India recognized Indonesia's independence on 2 September 1946. [2] Both countries are neighbours, India's Andaman and Nicobar Islands share a maritime border with Indonesia along the Andaman Sea. The Indian-Indonesian relationship stretches back for almost two millennia.
In June 1947, the TRI, per a government decision, was renamed the Indonesian National Armed Forces (Tentara Nasional Indonesia, TNI) which was a merger between the TRI and the independent paramilitary organizations (laskar) across Indonesia, becoming by 1950 the War Forces of the United States of Indonesia (Angkatan Perang Republik Indonesia ...