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Congo UN Peacekeepers Still Sexually
Abusing Girls
January 10, 2005 - (Congo Daily) United Nations
Peacekeepers' Sexual Abuse Of Local Girls Continuing In Dr Of Congo,
UN Finds
United Nations peacekeeping troops have continued the sexual abuse
of girls in the Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC), the UN's
watchdog office says, but peacekeeping officials say Member States
providing the soldiers must send sterner commanders and toughen
the punishment for perpetrators.
A report from the Office of Internal Oversight Services says, "The
OIOS investigation into allegations of sexual exploitation and abuse
of local Congolese women and girls found that the problem was serious
and ongoing. Equally disturbing was the lack of a protection and
deterrence programme at this time."
Although the troops knew that the investigation was being conducted
in eastern Bunia town from June to September last year, they continued
their activities, as evidenced by "the presence of freshly
used condoms near military camps and guard posts and by the additional
allegations of recent cases of solicitations brought to the attention
of the OIOS team during the last days of the investigation."
Despite lack of cooperation from two of the three military contingents,
the OIOS investigated 72 allegations, resulting in 20 case reports.
Of these cases, perpetrators were positively identified in six,
not identified in 11 and the accusations were not fully corroborated
in two.
Payment ranged from two eggs to $5 per encounter, OIOS said. Some
of the victims were abandoned orphans and they were often illiterate.
The UN forbids peacekeepers to pay for sex or to have sex with girls
younger than 18.
At UN Headquarters in New York, the chief of the UN Organization
Mission in the DRC (MONUC), William Lacy Swing, and the head of
the UN Department of Peacekeeping Operations (DPKO), Jean-Marie
Guéhenno, told reporters that the missions were making every
effort to tackle the problem of sexual exploitation in the DRC and
any other countries where peacekeeping missions were stationed.
Mr. Swing said he was shocked, outraged and sickened that peacekeepers
had caused grievous harm to the people they were sent to protect.
After the UN spotlighted the problems, a series of investigators
went to work, first from MONUC - from military components and civilian
police (CIVPOL), followed by representatives from DPKO and OIOS.
With troops being rotated out after six months, nine months, or
a year, as the investigation progressed, "we had to take people
off aircraft as they were leaving for home" and the girls and
young women were allowed to try to identify them, he said.
Now Assistant Secretary-General Angela Kane, formerly deputy chief
of the UN Mission in Ethiopia and Eritrea (UNMEE), was heading a
team likely to be in the DRC for up to two months, Mr. Swing said.
One country, France, had taken an accused national "the length
of the punitive chain," he said.
After the UN trained troops in the UN Mission in Sierra Leone (UNAMSIL)
about the Code of Conduct and the Blue Helmet rules in 2003 and
MONUC last year, the DRC received the first eight-member "Code
of Conduct Unit." The unit had inspired the formation of similar
units for UN mission in Burundi, Haiti and Côte d'Ivoire,
Mr. Swing said.
MONUC was also considering recommendations from Mr. Annan's special
adviser on the matter, Prince Zeid Ra'ad Zeid Al-Hussein of Jordan,
who had visited the DRC, and the Mission had set up a Sexual Exploitation
and Abuse (SEA) task force at Mr. Guéhenno's suggestion.
MONUC had also established curfews and off-limits areas, Mr. Swing
said.
Prince Zeid was now engaging the troop contributing countries (TCCs)
to come up with fresh ideas on military justice because presently
it was up to them to prosecute their nationals, Mr. Guéhenno
said.
"The TCCs are not just named and shamed but are given a chance
to show their follow-up," he said, adding, "In a broken
country, insert a force with power and money and the risk of creating
an exploitative situation is great."
The idea of banning sex with all civilians of all ages should be
looked at, but should not be done in a unilateral, "diktat"
manner, he said. The TCCs should be involved in the discussion and
where local jurisdictions were weak or non-existent, UN members
should work together to establish legal norms.
From: http://www.congodaily.com
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