The Philippines said Saturday it will repatriate over 400 of its troops serving as U.N. peacekeepers in the Golan Heights and Liberia amid security threats and concerns over the Ebola virus.
"To ensure the safety and security of the Philippine military troops deployed to conflict-affected areas, the country’s contingents in the Golan Heights and Liberia are scheduled to be repatriated within the year," a Defense Department statement said.
"The 331-strong Filipino contingent serving as part of the United Nations Disengagement Force (UNDOF) in the Golan Heights will be repatriated at the end of their tour of duty in October," the statement said.
Meanwhile, about 115 Filipinos serving in Liberia would be repatriated "as soon as possible," due to the health risk posed by the Ebola virus outbreak in Africa, the statement added.
"The Philippines prioritizes the safety and security of its troops, but remains committed to the peacekeeping missions of the United Nations," the statement said.
Defence Department spokesman Peter Paul Galvez said the Philippines would not send back its troops to the Golan Heights "unless the situation improves".
He expressed confidence the pullout would not hurt the country's standing with the United Nations, recalling that Filipino troops had remained in the Golan Heights in 2013 even after Australian, Croatian and Japanese peacekeepers were withdrawn.
"However the situation has become more volatile with increased security risk, hence the recommendation and subsequent approval for repatriation," he said in a statement to AFP.
Galvez also said that the Filipinos from Liberia would be quarantined for at least 21 days after arriving to ensure they are not infected.
Last year the Philippines also considered pulling its Golan peacekeepers out after 25 of them were kidnapped but later freed by Syrian rebels in two separate incidents.
A Filipino soldier was also wounded by a wayward shell last year.
Philippine President Benigno Aquino later agreed to a U.N. request to keep the Filipinos in the Golan after receiving pledges that they would be given more equipment to protect themselves.
The withdrawals would leave only 157 Filipino troops still serving as U.N. peacekeepers in Haiti, the armed forces said.
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