Australian soldiers of 15th Troop, 17th Construction Sqadron, members of the United Nations ...

Accession Number P03485.020
Collection type Photograph
Object type Negative
Maker Graham, Jason Keith
Place made Namibia: Kunene, Ovambo
Date made 7 November 1989
Conflict Period 1990-1999
Period 1980-1989
Namibia (UNTAG), 1989-1990
Copyright

Item copyright: AWM Licensed copyright

Description

Australian soldiers of 15th Troop, 17th Construction Sqadron, members of the United Nations Transition Assistance Group (UNTAG) relaxing around a mine protection vehicles (MPV) known as a Buffel. Identified is Sapper Andrew Bone (second from right) eating from a can, probably from a ration pack. UNTAG was established to ensure the independence of Namibia through free and fair elections under the supervision and control of the United Nations. It was also to ensure that South Africa withdrew from the country, all hostile acts ended, all discriminatory laws were repealed, political prisoners were released and Namibian refugees were permitted to return. The first UNTAG members arrived on 1 April 1989, and the force consisted of members from 124 nations, with a maximum of 7500 troops and 2000 international civilian and local staff. Namibia was divided into 23 electoral districts and registration centres were set up all over the country, with registration of more than 700,000 voters occurring between 3 July 1989 and 23 September 1989. UNTAG monitored the balloting and counting of votes in the elections held between 7 and 11 November 1989 to chose the 72 delegates to the new Constituent Assembly. The Assembly met for the first time to draft a new constitution, on 21 November 1989, the day after South Africa's remaining troops had left the country. The draft was unanimously approved on 9 February 1990 and on 16 February 1990, the Assembly elected SWAPO leader Sam Nujoma as President, who was sworn in by the United Nations Secretary General on 21 March 1990, the same day UNTAG's mandate ended.