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Abbreviation | DOMREP |
---|---|
Formation | 1965 |
Type | Peacekeeping force |
Legal status | Completed |
Purpose | Observe the ceasefire agreement |
Headquarters | Santo Domingo |
Location | |
Secretary General | U Thant |
Head of Mission | José Antonio Mayobre |
Military advisor | Indar Jit Rikhye |
Parent organization | Department of Peacekeeping Operations |
Expenses | $275,831 |
Staff | 4 including upto to 2 military observers from Brazil, Canada and Ecuador. |
Website | https://peacekeeping.un.org/en/mission/domrep/ |
The Mission of the Representative of the Secretary-General in the Dominican Republic (DOMREP) was a peacekeeping operation established in 1965 by the UN to observe the ceasefire agreement between the two de facto authorities in the Dominican Republic during the Dominican Civil War.[1] DOMREP was instructed to report any breaches of the agreements between the Constitutionalists led by Juan Bosch and Francisco Caamaño, and Loyalists commanded by Elías Wessin y Wessin and backed by the United States.[1] Once the new Dominican constitutional government was formed, DOMREP withdrew.[1]
Following the outbreak of civil war three weeks prior in the country, and the subsequent intervention of the United States – under the codename Operation Power Pack –, the United Nations Security Council organized DOMREP to oversee a ceasefire and free elections in the Dominican Republic.[2] The Secretary-General of the United Nations U Thant appointed Mr José Antonio Mayobre to oversee the mission until completion.[3] The UN DOMREP mission was significant because it marked the only peacekeeping mission to occur in the Western Hemisphere and in the sphere of American influence in the Cold War era.[4] General elections were held on 1 June 1966, resulting in victory for Joaquín Balaguer, and initiating the withdrawal of the peacekeeping operations in September 1966.[2]