Celebrating women peacekeepers from across Europe and Central Asia

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Observed every year on 29 May, the International Day of UN Peacekeepers honours all uniformed and civilian individuals who have served and continue to serve in UN peacekeeping operations around the world for their valuable contributions to peace.

This year’s celebration also marks the 75th anniversary of UN Peacekeeping. The 2023 theme, “Peace begins with me”, calls on each of us to join the global movement for peace, while recognizing the service and sacrifice of peacekeepers past and present, including the over 4200 peacekeepers who have given their lives under the UN flag.

As peacekeeping has evolved throughout the years, women have been increasingly deployed in police, military and civilian operations. Their heightened representation continues to have a tangible impact on peacekeeping environments, helping to protect women’s rights and support the role of women in building peace.

On International Day of UN Peacekeepers, we highlight the voices and celebrate the contributions of women peacekeepers from across Europe and Central Asia:

Commander Gordana Mitrovic quote card

Bosnia and Herzegovina, Commander Gordana Mitrovic 

Growing up in Bosnia and Herzegovina, Commander Gordana Mitrovic saw firsthand the role played by the United Nations in a conflict and post-conflict setting. “The UN work stayed with me,” she says, “and served as my motivation to become a peacekeeper”. Despite their equal abilities, Gordana notes, women in peacekeeping sometimes face heightened difficulty in earning the respect of local communities. But she believes this is all the more reason for women to join the field and “help communities to overcome the challenges in ensuring gender equality”.


Dilya Akhmetova quote card

Kazakhstan, Dilya Akhmetova 

As a Staff Officer with the UN Interim force in Lebanon, Dilya Akhmetova worked to distribute humanitarian aid among 109 cities and villages. Women’s inclusion in this process, she says, was essential to its success: With many educational and care facilities run by women, Dilya was able to gain the trust of their directors in a way her male colleagues could not. Conversing openly with these women allowed her to better understand the problems they were facing and determine how to allocate aid.


Major Natalia Lefter quote card

Moldova, Major Natalia Lefter 

Before entering peacekeeping, Major Natalia Lefter faced significant discouragement from those around her. “Everyone said to me, “you don’t stand a chance,” she recalls. But she pushed forward anyway: “I went ahead studying all the theoretical and practical aspects to be enlisted”. Her efforts paid off, and while deployed she found she was able to give other women and girls the support she had lacked: “Women need a model that can give them the confidence that every person can become strong.”


Captain Vasilija Joksimovic quote card

Serbia, Captain Vasilija Joksimovic 

There were many factors that drew Captain Vasilija Joksimovic to peacekeeping, but key among them was the chance to make a tangible impact on the lives of people in need. As a woman peacekeeper, she has experienced, “some level of uncertainty if we belong there and if we are capable of accomplishing given tasks”, she says. But her experiences on the ground have also made her more certain than ever that women are essential to the success of peacekeeping missions.


Liutenant Milica Stanković quote card

Serbia, Liutenant Milica Stanković 

Women’s involvement in peacekeeping, says Liutenant Milica Stanković, is as essential as it is everywhere else: “As in every part of life, women have an important role as peacekeepers.” Being a peacekeeper is more than a job, she emphasizes: It’s a way of living, and the biggest challenge—for men and women both—is to be the best version of yourself every day. A medical doctor, Milica cites the “wonderful people” she serves as driving force that keeps her going.