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RESOLUTION 1325
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Burma: In the Wake of Security
Council Resolution on Sexual Violence in Armed Conflict the Security
Council Should Refer the Situation in Burma to the International
Criminal Court
PRESS RELEASE
June 20, 2008 – (Global Justice Center)
The United Nation's Security Council took a historic step with the
passage of Resolution 1820 on Sexual Violence in Armed Conflict.
Resolution 1820 recognizes the importance of full implementation
of Resolution 1325 on women, peace and security and reaffirms the
Security Council's commitment to end sexual violence as a weapon
of war and a means to terrorize populations and destroy communities.
For this commitment to be meaningful, the Security Council must
provide justice for victims of sexual violence in armed conflict
even when it is not politically convenient. As Resolution 1820 states:
Recalling the inclusion of a range of sexual
violence offenses in the Rome Statute of the International Criminal
Court...,
Notes that rape and other forms of sexual violence
can constitute a war crime, a crime against humanity, or a constitutive
act with respect to genocide... and calls upon
Member States to comply with their obligations for prosecuting persons
responsible for such acts, to ensure that all victims of sexual
violence, particularly women and girls, have equal protection under
the law and equal access to justice, and stresses the importance
of ending impunity for such acts as part of a comprehensive approach
to seeking sustainable peace, justice, truth, and national reconciliation;
There is substantial documentation that sexual violence is used
by the military junta against ethnic women in Burma as a means to
consolidate military rule and destroy ethnic communities. Virtually
none of the perpetrators have been brought to justice. Four concrete
examples of this sexual violence include:
* October 23 to November 4, 2004 - four Mon women held by SPDC troops
at their base and repeatedly gang raped (Catwalk to the Barracks,
Mon Women's Organization, 2004)
* October 9, 2006 - Palaung woman raped, her skull cracked open
and stabbed four times in her left breast (Burma Human Rights
Yearbook, Human Rights Documentation Unit, 2006)
* October 10, 2006 - three naval cadets raped a 14 year old girl,
none of the cadets were punished and the girl was forced to marry
one of her rapists. (Burma Human Rights Yearbook, 2006)
These crimes are part of a systematic strategy for destroying ethnic
communities in Burma and are a threat to international peace and
security. Security Council Resolution 1325 specified the need to
affirm the link between women and peace and security and to address
sexual violence against women in conflict. This was reaffirmed in
Resolution 1674 on the protection of civilians in armed conflict,
which endorsed the Responsibility to Protect Doctrine. In Resolution
1820, the Security Council resolved to take action to end the impunity
of those responsible for sexual violence in armed conflict once
and for all. For Burma, politics must give way to justice. The Security
Council should use its Chapter VII powers to refer the military
junta to the International Criminal Court.
SPDC leaders who should be investigated for systematic sexual
violence in Burma include:
* Senior-General Than Shwe, Chairman and Commander-in-Chief
of Defense Services
* Deputy Senior-General Maung Aye, Vice Chairman
and Deputy Commander-in-Chief of Defense Services and Commander-in-Chief
(Army)
* General Thura Shwe Mann, Joint Chief of Staff
of the Army, Navy and Air Force
From:http://www.globaljusticecenter.net/
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