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HAITI: Treatment centre reports
rising sexual violence and HIV
November 1, 2007 - (IRIN) Sexual
violence drastically increased with the outbreak of violence in
2004.
Apart from HIV, sexual violence
against women in Haiti is another virus that has so far proved resistant
to a cure. Activists say they are unsure whether the rise in cases
over the last few years is due to violence becoming more widespread,
or the result of campaigns calling on women to speak out.
Either way, human rights groups
say it is an indictment of the way the society treats its women.
According to a study published by UK-based medical journal The Lancet,
35,000 women were subject to sexual violence around the capital,
Port-au-Prince, between 2003 and 2005; more than half were younger
than 18 years.
In 2004, political tensions in Haiti
degenerated into violence as a rebel group made up of anti-government
gangs and demobilised soldiers began to seize towns; President Jean-Baptiste
Aristide was forced into exile.
"The year 2004 saw the climax
of the violence, particularly sexual violence," said Dr Brunel
Delonnay, a senior official in a government unit that coordinates
programmes on sexually transmitted infections, HIV/AIDS and tuberculosis.
The violence continued in 2005 and
early 2006 with 'Operation Baghdad', launched by armed Aristide
supporters demanding his return despite the presence of a United
Nations peacekeeping force.
Before the unrest, the Gheskio Centre,
the largest HIV treatment centres in Port-au-Prince, was seeing
just a handful of women requesting HIV testing after sexual assaults.
In 2006 numbers rose to between 40 or 50 cases a month, many of
them gang rapes.
"At first it was slow - one
case here, one case there," said the centre's secretary-general,
Dr Marie Deschamps. "Now the women come, but [nearly half]
of them come too late." Post-exposure prophylaxis, which cuts
the risk of HIV infection, must be administered within 72 hours
of the attack.
Twelve percent of the women reporting
to the centre are pregnant, and around two percent are HIV-positive,
said Deschamps. "In 90 percent of cases, the victims come to
get screened for HIV because they are scared. If they thought we
couldn't prevent HIV infection, they wouldn't come."
Haiti has an HIV prevalence rate
of 3.8 percent, the highest in the region.
Sexual violence linked to political
insecurity is just the tip of the iceberg. "This situation
[of political instability] has obscured habitual sexual violence
happening behind closed doors, which was hidden and not brought
to justice," said Delonnay.
Dr Jean-William Pape, director
and co-founder of the Gheskio Centre, agrees. "At the start,
the [recorded] incidents of sexual violence were committed by persons
who were unknown and armed, but this has changed; now many of the
victims know their attackers," he said.
Pressed by human rights activists,
the Haitian government is beginning to improve the legal protection
of women. Legislation was passed in 2005 that reclassified rape
as a stand-alone crime carrying a maximum sentence of life imprisonment;
previously it was categorised as part of the wider crime of sexual
molestation.
The definition of adultery had also
contained gender double standards: when committed by a man it was
only recognised if it was actually committed in the marital bed,
but in the case of a woman the location did not matter, a distinction
that has now been done away with.
Despite these attempts at legal
reforms, perpetrators of sexual violence still enjoy a level of
impunity; women are often too ashamed to testify against their attacker,
and when the assailant is a man in uniform, too scared. According
to the Lancet study, 14 percent of cases of sexual assault were
attributed to members of the police force.
Although the police insist they
"do not tolerate such acts", the behaviour of the police
on the streets has been denounced by human rights organisations
and sex workers.
From: http://www.plusnews.org/Report.aspx?ReportId=75091
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