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DRC: "Majority of rapists
go unpunished"
March 18, 2008 - (IRIN) Sexual violence against
women is rampant in the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC) but the
majority of perpetrators, especially in "no-law" zones,
go unpunished, according to a UN independent human rights expert.
In South Kivu Province, for example, 14,200 rape
cases were registered between 2005 and 2007 but only 287 were taken
to court, Titinga Frederic Pacere, the UN Human Rights Council's
independent expert on the state of human rights in the DRC, told
reporters on 14 March.
He expressed concern over the human rights situation in the DRC,
saying insecurity was almost everywhere, especially in the east,
and state authority had not reached all areas.
Calling for the creation of an international jurisdiction for the
DRC that would do more than just judging but also "scare",
Pacere added: "If we have a court, warlords would be cautious."
Human Rights Watch (HRW) had urged the Council to intensify its
engagement on "the neglected human rights crisis" in countries
such as the DRC.
"The DRC still has to overcome serious and widespread human
rights violations, including arbitrary arrest and detention of people
linked to the political opposition in Kinshasa, the use of torture,
and accountability for war crimes committed during the armed conflict,"
HRW noted in a statement issued on 3 March.
"Recent events in eastern DRC demand targeted action by the
Council," it added. "A peace deal was reached in late
January with the government and all armed groups in North and South
Kivu, following a renewal of armed conflict in which more than 400,000
people were displaced, scores of civilians were killed or abducted,
and widespread rape and looting and destruction of property occurred.
"That deal has seemed increasingly fragile in recent weeks,
and the Council could play a crucial role by creating a separate
mechanism to monitor the implementation of the human rights commitments
contained in the agreement."
Weapon of war
Aid organisations working in DRC have decried the high incidence
of rape and called for more action to combat it. According to Oxfam
GB, rape and sexual slavery in DRC are used "as a systematic
weapon of war", which has led to the rapid advance of HIV/AIDS.
Médecins Sans Frontières-Suisse has noted that since
2003, between 30 and 500 patients reported sexual assaults each
month in Ituri. Panzi general hospital in Bukavu, South Kivu's capital,
admits at least 10 victims of sexual assault daily, an average of
3,600 cases a year, according to its director, Denis Mukwege Mukengere.
Since 2000, an estimated 16,000 victims of rape, some suffering
from obstetric fistula, have been treated at the hospital.
Yakin Erturk, special rapporteur of the UN Human
Rights Council on violence against women, has estimated that 4,500
cases of rape were reported in South Kivu in the first six months
of 2007 alone, with many more going unreported. Sexual violence,
she noted, was perceived as "normal" by local communities.
According to the UN World Food Programme: "Rape remains a daily
threat for women in eastern DRC: in the fields, on their way back
from market or in their own homes. Victims say all the armed groups
are responsible."
Following a visit to the region in 2007, John Holmes,
UN Under-Secretary-General for Humanitarian Affairs and Emergency
Relief Coordinator, called for a response to the scourge.
"Despite many warnings, nothing quite prepared me for what
I heard last month from survivors of a sexual violence so brutal
it staggers the imagination and mocked my notions of human decency,"
he wrote in the Los Angeles Times on 11 October. "Sexual violence
has been a particularly awful - and shockingly common - feature
of the conflict in Congo."
According to analysts, sexual violence against women and girls is
a facet of warfare that is often used as a weapon of terror to inflict
physical and psychological damage. But in DRC, it is "systematic"
and could be prosecuted as a crime against humanity or as a form
of genocide.
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