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SIERRA LEONE: Sex crimes
continue in peacetime
June 20, 2008 - (IRIN) Eight years after a civil
war in Sierra Leone that became notorious for the extent of rape
and violence committed against civilians, social workers fear that
rape is more of a problem in post-conflict, democratic society than
it was during the war.
The International Rescue Committee (IRC), which runs four “Rainbo
Centres” - counseling and treatment clinics for raped and
battered women in Sierra Leone - recorded 1,176 attacks on women
around the country last year. Its staff say these numbers are just
the tip of the iceberg.
“When we started work just after the war it was to provide
medical and psychological counseling to women who had been abused
during the war, but the new cases have just not stopped coming,”
said Hannah Kargbo, a nurse who treats abused women.
“Some of the perpetrators were children during the war and
were exposed to rape and sexual violence then and just carried on
doing it,” she said. The highest numbers of cases come from
areas where large numbers of ex-combatants are gathered.
Stigmatisation
“The ministry of health just cannot give it the attention
it deserves with [other priorities, including] such high levels
of child and maternal mortality,” explained Alan Glasgow,
the head of the IRC in Sierra Leone. “They want to, but the
resources just aren’t there.”
Even when facilities do exist – like the IRC-run Rainbo Centres
- people are very reluctant to come forward and talk about what
has happened to them.
“Being raped is stigmatised by society in Sierra Leone,”
said Eunice Whenzle, head of the Rainbo Centre in the capital Freetown,
who says that even the question of what constitutes a sexual assault
is a very complex issue in Sierra Leonean society.
Marital rape is still not considered a crime. It
is also still normal for society to blame the victims for what has
happened to them, usually for how they dress or comport themselves,
social workers say.
Protection of women
Getting a clear statistical picture of the problem is hindered by
the country’s still devastated health infrastructure, fractured
local government and other humanitarian priorities.
While the number of rapes is unclear, the extent of the problem
is acknowledged by officials at all levels as alarming. “Rape
is endemic and pervasive,” said one senior UN official, who
requested anonymity.
Police officials said most police stations and police sub-offices
receive at least one complaint of rape every day.
According to the human rights group Amnesty International (USA),
increased rape and domestic violence in post-conflict situations
has also been recorded in the Democratic Republic of Congo, former
Yugoslavia and Northern Ireland.
“Studies suggest that domestic violence continues to intensify
after conflict and is worse than it was during the conflict,”
Amnesty says, urging added attention on protection of women and
girls in post-conflict states.
“When states fail to take the basic steps necessary to protect
women from domestic violence or allow these crimes to be committed
with impunity, they are failing in their obligation to protect women's
rights,” it said in a report on post-conflict violence.
Rapists go free
But in Sierra Leone impunity for rapists is still the norm. Of 896
Rainbo Centre clients that sought legal action against their attackers
in 2007, just 13 perpetrators received a conviction.
Partly to blame is society’s pressure for silence from the
attacked. “The victims think that if other people get to hear
about the attack they will be mocked and blamed,” Whenzle
said.
Fear of stigmatisation is especially acute among the young girls
and teenagers who make up the bulk of rape victims. According to
the IRC, between January and December 2007 some 65 percent of the
victims it treated were under 15 years old. The youngest client
was 2 months old.
“The young ones refuse to go back to school after the attack
because they think other children will tease them about it,”
explained Whenzle. “Some of the girls completely retract from
society, refusing to eat or engage with anyone.”
Even when girls and women do come forward and try to get a legal
conviction against their attacker, they face large financial and
administrative obstacles to getting the necessary medical exams
and certificates, and then an interminable wait for justice.
“The court system is incredibly slow,” said Whenzle
at the Rainbo Centre in Freetown. “We try to explain to people
that it is nonetheless better to let the justice system run its
course, otherwise these crimes will go on and on, but mostly people
settle out of court.”
“As a result, rapists go free, and sometimes the same girl
is even raped again by the same man.”
Failure
Even when victims overcome the social and financial barriers to
getting their case heard, the criminal justice system has largely
failed to successfully prosecute sex crimes.
“There is no stigma attached to being a rapist in Sierra Leonean
society, only to being raped,” Whenzle said. ped
In some cases, girls are even obliged by their families to marry
the man who raped them. “These are mostly uneducated people
and their family’s think just giving the girl away is the
best thing to do.”
More commonly however, the rapist will offer to give money to the
victim’s family as a form of punishment. “Ultimately
money becomes more important than the child’s welfare,”
Whenzle said.
Amie Kandeh, a gender-based violence expert at the IRC in Freetown,
agreed. “There is a total lack of support in society for holding
perpetrators accountable,” she said.
“We saw rape and sexual violence used as a tool during the
war, and now it is morphing into this culture’s society as
something that is understood and even accepted,” said Glasgow,
the IRC head.
From:http://www.irinnews.org/Report.aspx?ReportId=78853
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