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UN expert urges action to help
women victims of violence in DR Congo
January 25, 2008 – An independent United
Nations expert today called for international action to help women
in the Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC) who have been victimized
by violence, including sexual abuse and rape, perpetrated by both
militia and Government troops and fostered by a culture of impunity.
Yakin Ertürk, the Special Rapporteur on violence
against women, its causes and consequences, described the gruesome
atrocities she witnessed when visiting the Democratic Republic of
the Congo (DRC) last year. “I have seen little girls, women
whose hands were chopped off, who were abducted, sexually enslaved,
forced to eat the flesh of dead relatives, etcetera, etcetera,”
she said. “Things are quite dire.”
Eastern Congo in particular has received greater
attention because of the presence there of foreign groups which
she said were the “main perpetrators of violence against women
as well as the civilian population in general.”
But she cautioned that the problems are not limited
to eastern Congo; in Equator Province “the army and national
police are among the main perpetrators.” Ms. Ertürk cited
a mass rape by soldiers in April, which led to seven soldiers being
sentenced to life imprisonment before they later “escaped
or walked out of the military prison.”
She decried the fact that in the peace process,
efforts to demobilize the militia do not include a justice component.
“These militants are demobilized and reintegrated either into
civilian life or into the army and they continue the kinds of violent
acts they were responsible for during the armed conflict, as civilians
or as soldiers in the national army.”
The focus on disarmament and reintegration of ex-combatants
in the peace process “does not take into consideration the
sufferings of women or the needs of women,” she said. “Those
are missing links in the peace process.”
The expert, who serves in an unpaid, independent
capacity, urged international help for women who have been victimized.
“Many of these women who have survived are today human rights
defenders who are working diligently on the ground to respond to
the gap created by the State in terms of providing medical as well
as other care services to women who are continually being raped,”
she said.
“There is an urgent need to mobilize support
for these women who are working both under security threats as well
as severe resource” problems, she added. “We must support
these grass-roots initiatives because that’s how the country
is going to be rebuilt.”
Countless victims are in inaccessible areas with
little or no form of redress. “The justice system, the penitentiary
system, is in deplorable conditions,” she said. Often victims
must pay for access to the courts in what she called a “major
obstacle to justice.”
She called for urgent measures to address security and justice simultaneously
and stressed that women need more than compensation – they
need empowerment.
Ms. Ertürk’s report will be submitted
to the UN Human Rights Council in March.
From:http://www.un.org/apps/news/story.asp?NewsID=25409&Cr=democratic&Cr1=congo
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