The India-led Group of Friends (GOF), which consists of 40 member states, called its second meeting to discuss ways to strengthen legal frameworks against those who commit malicious acts against peacekeepers, with a focus on supporting measures for ensuring accountability, according to an official release. 

The goal of the meeting was to promote accountability for crimes against peacekeepers.

According to a news statement from India's Permanent Mission to the UN, the database is intended to function as an online repository, enabling the Secretariat, missions, and member states to track and handle situations of malevolent acts against peacekeepers.

During the meeting, Ambassador Ruchira Kamboj, the permanent representative of India to the UN, gave a summary of the GOF's accomplishments over the previous year and emphasized the knowledge learned about the difficulties associated with accountability, specifically with regard to bolstering the rule of law in mission areas. 
She conveyed her confidence in using these revelations to implement significant policies that will advance accountability for atrocities against peacekeepers.

A thorough discussion of creating legislative frameworks to support the idea of accountability for crimes against peacekeepers was a further topic on the meeting's agenda. 
Renowned International Law Commission member and vice chancellor of Rashtriya Raksha University, Professor Bimal Patel, provided knowledgeable commentary on this complex subject. 
Member states had productive discussions about how to help the rule-of-law authorities in the host state prosecute offenders and guarantee justice for peacekeepers.

She was confident that these findings would be used to advance accountability for crimes against peacekeepers through the implementation of meaningful policies.