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RESOLUTION 1325
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'No justice' for DR
Congo's raped
March 7, 2005 (BBC - Kigali) A human rights
group says the justice system in the Democratic Republic of Congo
needs urgent reform to end widespread rape in eastern areas.
The US-based Human Rights Watch says that although more rape victims
have gone to court, the government has not done enough to ensure
prosecutions.
The organisation says armed men have raped tens of thousands of
women and girls since civil war began in 1998.
The violence has continued despite an official end to the civil
war in 2003.
HRW says that in some parts of eastern DR Congo, rape has become
so prevalent the women have stopped going to work in the fields.
Some of the victims are girls as young as three. Men and boys have
also been raped.
Weapon of war
But sexual violence in eastern DR Congo is not a random act.
It is often used as a weapon of war; a means of humiliating and
controlling civilian populations.
Many victims are gang-raped. Some are also violated with objects
like sticks and knives.
Only a handful of the perpetrators have been brought to justice.
But HRW's Alison Deforges says women in eastern DR Congo are now
fighting to end this impunity.
"In the past, this was an area where there was virtually no
action by victims - they were too ashamed, too weak, too afraid
to try to do anything.
"But the remarkable development in the last year has been an
effort by a number of victims to bring their aggressors to justice,"
she says.
But the challenges they face in taking their cases to court are
huge.
Prosecutors are sometimes unwilling to investigate crimes of rape;
witnesses are intimidated; and military authorities often refuse
to cooperate.
HRW wants urgent reform of the justice system to make prosecution
of rape easier - both to allow the inclusion of male rape, rape
with objects and, in addition, provision for protection of witnesses
and assuring confidentiality.
But, for now, impunity in eastern DR Congo continues.
HRW says less than 12 perpetrators have been prosecuted, out of
tens of thousands of rapes committed.
From: http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/africa/4325397.stm
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