|
Congo-Kinshasa:
UN Human Rights Chief 'Appalled' By Sexual Violence in DR Congo,
Burundi
May 31 2007 - (UN News Centre) The top United Nations
human rights official today said that she was appalled by the level
of sexual and gender-based violence she found in Africa's Great
Lakes region, particularly in the Democratic Republic of the Congo
(DRC) and Burundi.
"I have to say the level of sexual violence
and its intensity is pretty surprising and appalling," High
Commissioner for Human Rights Louise Arbour told reporters in New
York after briefing the Security Council on her recent 12-day visit
to the region, where she toured the DRC, Rwanda and Burundi.
"Gender-based violence is not just an affront
to dignity; it is a form of torture and absolute brutal physical
and mental assault on the victims," she said.
In a hospital Ms. Arbour visited in Kisangani in
the northern DRC, one of the many she stopped at during her mission,
she said that 60 per cent of the cases involved victims between
the ages of 11 and 17.
Providing medical assistance - such as major fistula
surgery - to assist victims is key, Ms. Arbour said, but she observed
that "what is required is so out of reach," both in terms
of resources and of manpower.
She stressed that efforts targeting perpetrators
and bring them to justice are also crucial.
While women who have been victims of violence have
been ostracized and stigmatized, those behind the crimes operate
with impunity, she said. In some instances, women are teased by
the very same people who attacked them.
Deficits in the justice systems in the DRC and
Burundi must be addressed to ensure that perpetrators of such crimes
are prosecuted, she said. The system in the DRC is "so deficient,"
she said, with informal settlements often taking place so those
responsible are not charged. Meanwhile in Burundi, she said that
magistrates themselves have commented on the corruption and interference
thwarting the prosecution of cases.
In the DRC, the High Commissioner said that she
travelled to such areas as Kisangani as well as Bunia and Goma in
the east, "where armed groups are still continuing their predatory
practices."
One of the unfortunate effects in the DRC of the
reintegration of militia leaders into the Armed Forces of the DRC
(FARDC) is that "they have been emboldened, further empowered
and seem to be continuing exactly the same pattern of predatory
practices against civilians in the region," she noted, calling
for a major reform of the security sector.
From:http://allafrica.com/stories/200706010003.html
|