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RESOLUTION 1325
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[US] Senate Committee Hearing on Rape
as a Weapon of War
DRC: April 3, 2008 (Feminist Daily News Wire)
- On Tuesday, United States Senator Dick Durbin chaired the first-ever
Congressional hearing on the use of rape as a weapon of war. The
Subcommittee on Human Rights and Law discussed the need to hold
perpetrators accountable for sexual violence against women. The
focus of the hearing was sexual violence as a weapon of war in
Democratic Republic of the Congo, with testimonies from Lisa F.
Jackson, Karin Wachter, Dr. Kelly Dawn Askin, and Dr. Denis Mukwege.
Senator Durbin convened the hearing by stating his disappointment
with the U.S. failure to take action on the issue. He said, "I'm
sorry to say that if a foreign warlord who is engaged in mass
rape found his way to the US today, he'd likely be beyond the
reach of our laws. That is shameful. If we fail to close these
loopholes, we will allow these crimes to continue with impunity."
During the hearing, scenes from the documentary The
Greatest Silence: Rape in Congo were shown. Lisa F. Jackson,
the director of the documentary, testified on the lack of attention
and stigma that is attached to rape as an act of war.
She asked, "Why has the world been so silent? Why in the
last 10 years, has there been only ONE front-page story in the
New York Times about the epidemic of sexual violence that is devastating
the Congo? Why is it that rape in conflict is so infrequently
prosecuted in the world’s courts? Where is the outrage?"
Congolese Dr. Denis Mukwege described to the Senate Subcommittee
the sexual terrorism that women in Eastern Democratic Republic
of the Congo have faced for over 10 years. Dr. Mukwege said, "This
type of sexual terrorism is done in a methodical manner by armed
groups. The rapists are not seeking to satisfy some kind of sexual
desire, but to destroy her family and destroy her community."
From:http://www.feminist.org/news/newsbyte/uswirestory.asp?id=10919
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