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Rape in war 'a growing problem'
June 22, 2006 (BBC) Rape and sexual violence in conflict appear
to be worsening and very little is being done to tackle the problem,
a major UN conference has heard. The conference organiser, the UN
Population Fund (UNFPA), wants a UN declaration and extra funding.
Delegates from 14 conflict-affected countries, half from Africa,
are attending the conference in Brussels. The UNFPA says that, while
sexual violence in wartime is not new, there is evidence it is becoming
more common. The trend towards more civil and regional conflicts
means civilians are targeted more than ever before, the organisation
says.
Women and children are vulnerable, not just during armed attacks,
but also in displacement camps, during aid distribution and even
after conflict has officially ended. "Everybody in the world
knows that sexual violence, especially in war situations, is wrong,"
Thoraya Obaid, the UNFPA's executive director, said. "But very
little effort is being directed either to stop it or to provide
support to women who are facing this kind of a crime in their own
countries."
Gaza Cases
A UN report prepared for the meeting found that systematic rape
was a prominent feature of the conflicts in Bosnia-Hergovina, DR
Congo, East Timor and Haiti, and is ongoing in the Darfur region
of Sudan.
"Sexual violence is a human rights violation, a global public
health problem, and an impediment to recovery, development and peace."
Kofi Annan
UN Secretary General
No-one knows exactly how many women have been attacked in the chaos
of Darfur, the BBC's David Loyn says from the conference. But rape
has been used there as a weapon of war to impose the will of one
people on another - as it was in previous conflicts such as those
in Bosnia-Hercegovina and Rwanda, he says.
In Rwanda, officials estimate that 60,000 women were raped during
the 1994 conflict, two-thirds of whom have been infected with HIV/Aids,
the UNFPA believes. In Bosnia, the figure is put at around 40,000.
The conference has already heard testimony from the DR Congo, where
sex with very young children has become commonplace in the mistaken
belief it can cure Aids.
Sexual violence has also been linked to development funding. Cases
in Gaza and the West Bank have increased significantly since the
EU and the US cut funding after January's election of Hamas, Luay
Shabaneh of the Palestinian Central Bureau of Statistics says. The
three-day conference, sponsored by the European Commission and Belgium,
is the first such international event to address the problem, says
the UN.
In a statement, UN Secretary General Kofi Annan said the global
body took the issue with "utmost seriousness" and urged
donors to "provide the backing required" to deal with
the problem.
From: http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/europe/5105102.stm
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