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RESOLUTION 1325
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Peacekeepers,
teachers prey on Liberia girls-report
By Alphonso Toweh
May 8, 2006 -(Reuters) U.N. peacekeepers,
aid workers and teachers are having sex with Liberian girls as young
as 8 in return for money, food or favours, threatening efforts to
rebuild a nation wrecked by war, a report said on Monday.
Save the Children UK said an alarming number of girls were being
sexually exploited by men in authority in refugee camps and in the
wider community, sometimes for as little as a bottle of beer, a
ride in an aid vehicle or watching a film.
"This cannot continue," Save the Children UK Chief Executive
Jasmine Whitbread said. "Men who use positions of power to
take advantage of vulnerable children must be reported and fired."
"More must be done to support children and their families to
make a living without turning to this kind of desperation."
The 20-page document said local people reported sexual exploitation
by peacekeepers in every location where a contingent of the UNMIL
peacekeeping force was stationed, highlighting the continuing problem
of sex abuse by U.N. forces.
Allegations of sexual misconduct have dogged U.N. operations in
Liberia, Ivory Coast, Haiti and the Democratic Republic of Congo,
where the world body has accused members of its biggest peacekeeping
force of rape, paedophilia and giving children food or money in
return for sex.
The U.N. force in Liberia said in a statement eight cases of sexual
exploitation and abuse involving U.N. personnel had been reported
since the start of 2006. One of those had been substantiated and
the member of staff suspended.
"We are appalled with any activity, the sexual exploitation
or abuse by aid workers, be they international or Liberian. It's
unacceptable behaviour," Jordan Ryan, U.N. humanitarian coordinator
in Liberia, told BBC radio from Monrovia.
Save the Children urged Liberia's new government, U.N. agencies
and donors to set up a government-led ombudsman office to ensure
sex abuse allegations are investigated.
Countries which contribute troops to the U.N. force should also
ensure soldiers who sexually exploited children are charged and
those found guilty removed from the force, it said.
The report highlighted the relationship between food aid, poverty
and sex, in particular accusations that some men involved in distributing
food rations demanded sex in return.
"The World Food Programme (WFP) together with the other U.N.
agencies will obviously be looking into these allegations very seriously
because obviously we have zero tolerance for any sexual exploitation,"
WFP spokeswoman Caroline Hurford told Reuters TV in Rome.
"MAN BUSINESS"
Liberian society has been shattered by a 1989-2003 civil war which
caused an estimated 250,000 deaths in a country of barely 3 million
people, forcing around 1.3 million people from their homes into
camps around the capital Monrovia or abroad.
Elections late last year saw Harvard-trained former World Bank economist
Ellen Johnson-Sirleaf voted in as president, but her government
faces a massive task to rebuild an economy and society torn apart
by years of bloodshed.
The report's compilers spoke to more than 300 people in camps for
displaced people and communities where people had recently returned
to their pre-war localities.
"All of the respondents clearly stated that they felt that
the scale of the problem affected over half of the girls in their
locations," it said, adding aid workers, teachers, camp and
government employees, policemen and soldiers were involved.
"The girls reportedly ranged in age from 8 to 18 years, with
girls of 12 years and upwards identified as being regularly involved
in 'selling sex'," it said.
From: http://www.alertnet.org/thenews/newsdesk/L08519504.htm
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