Burundians Say Peace Must
Include Tough Rape Laws
By Anna S. Sussman
September 13, 2007- (WOMENSENEWS) At a small rape clinic run
by Doctors Without Borders in Bujumbura, the capital of the small
East African nation of Burundi, young rape victims line up for
antiretroviral medication to treat HIV.
Although the war has ended, the rape crisis continues.
Luk Van Baeren, a field officer at the clinic, says it sees about
10 victims of sexual violence each day, and says he thinks that's
only the tip of the iceberg.
His patients suffer enormous shame and alienation in a country
that still heavily stigmatizes rape.
The family of 15-year-old Nadege Mininani, for instance, expelled
her from her home after her rape resulted in pregnancy and told
her she had brought shame upon them.
She said she would never prosecute; she would be too embarrassed
and, besides, wouldn't even know how.
Van Baeren says only about 1 percent of his patients follow through
with judicial recourse.
"There are no laws for rape," he says. "There
is a lack of rule of law in general."
After 13 years of civil war, 27 years of dictator rule and violence
between Hutu and Tutsi ethnic groups, much of Burundi's infrastructure
is suffering. The long war resulted in a lawless police and army
force, and a judicial system in shambles unprepared to process
the huge number of legal battles piling up at its doors.
Peace-Building Commission
The government, aided by the international community, is attempting
to rebuild the nation. The World Bank has pledged more than $130
million in aid to finance education and community development.
The United Nations has switched tactics in Burundi from peacekeeping
to peace-building, with the establishment of one of the first
U.N. peace-building commissions.
As part of its reconstruction effort, the country is hoping to
stage tribunals for war criminals and a truth and reconciliation
commission, but no date has been set. The truth commission will
be modeled on that of South Africa, which was hailed for its ability
to help heal a divided country through the simple use of organized,
public confession and forgiveness.
But as Burundi struggles to maintain a delicate peace, women's
rights advocates are calling for nationwide legal and social reforms
to address the countless crimes of sexual violence committed during
the war and to reform the country's legal treatment of rape.
Eugene Nindorera, Burundian activist and former human rights
minister, says the new, post-war government must make substantial
changes to its legal system if it really wants to protect the
rights of women, something it has yet to do.
"We didn't change how to respect human rights, how to have
a rule of law. Rule of law is something that is very fundamental
for good governance."
He says the current government seems to favor ignoring the perpetrators
of human rights abuses, in part because many government officials
fear prosecution themselves for crimes committed during the war.
"We can't accept the impunity that has been acceptable for
all these years, so we have to struggle against impunity,"
Nindorera says. "We have to put in jail all these people
who are responsible. To strengthen human rights and the justice
is very important, but it's not seen as very important, according
to the resources that are accorded to these different sections.
It's frustrating."
Justice Key to Reconciliation
Nindorera and other activists say Burundi cannot enjoy a lasting
peace until the women of the country see justice for the violence
they have endured. That means any reconciliation effort must prioritize
the criminalization of sexual violence.
"It is important for those who have committed these crimes
to be punished. It is in the interest of the Burundi citizens,"
said Patricia Ntahorubuze of the Bujumbura-based Association of
Women Lawyers, Burundi. "All of the violence that was committed
against women must be addressed first."
In Rwanda, the prosecution of crimes of sexual violence committed
during the genocide was deemed so serious and sensitive that sex
crimes were removed from the dockets of the local 'Gacaca' genocide
courts and placed firmly in the jurisdiction of the national courts
so as to publicly acknowledge the gravity of rape crimes, explained
Domitilla Mukantaganzwa, executive secretary of the National Service
of Gacaca Jurisdictions in Kigali, Rwanda.
The biggest obstacle on the road to justice lies in Burundi's
historic laxity toward rape. The rape laws on the books are vague,
outdated and insufficient, says Ntahorubuze. As of today, there
is really no law specifically criminalizing rape.
"There has to be a separate specific law for crimes of sexual
violence. Right now, the law is obscure. Under the reforms of
the penal code, the government must create a specific law which
will promote prevention," she said.
Strengthening Rape Laws
Her organization, along with others, is petitioning the government
to revise and strengthen the laws around sexual violence and is
advising a special judicial review committee convened by concerned
activists. She says that rape was so endemic during the war that
the peace process will be useless if it fails to properly address
the issue.
"The government needs to harmonize the laws so as to make
them more applicable to the events of today and make them consistent
with the new constitution, the peace accords and the International
Criminal Court."
In Burundi, as in much of the African Great Lakes region, women's
bodies have served as a battleground for ethnic violence and political
warfare. Official statistics are scarce, but the United Nations
and New York-based Human Rights Watch report that government soldiers
and rebels raped Burundian women and girls in epidemic proportions
during the war.
On a recent visit to the region, U.N. Human Rights Chief Louise
Arbour called the number of victims of sexual crimes in the region
appalling.
"In Burundi, there is also a lot of deficit in the capacity
or willingness of the justice system to address these issues,"
she said at a press briefing in June.
Ntahorubuze says criminals convicted of petty theft typically
serve longer prison sentences than those convicted of rape.
"It is a problem because there is a tendency to treat these
incidents as lesser crimes. This is a sin because many who are
brought to court on rape charges are immediately released,"
she said. Many victims don't bother seeking prosecution because
they know nothing will be done.
Often, crimes of sexual violence are resolved in what is locally
called the "friendship way," with an exchange of cows
or cash, according the Bujumbura-based human rights group League
Iteka.
From:http://www.womensenews.org/article.cfm/dyn/aid/3312/context/archive