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LIBERIA: Rape victims’
voices not heard, aid workers
April 7, 2006 -(IRIN) The post-war reconstruction of battered buildings
and shattered lives is underway in Liberia, but rape, a common weapon
in the 14-years of fighting, is still a problem and some aid workers
reckon it’s on the rise.
Rape is “alarmingly increasing on a daily basis,” according
to Counsellor Lois Bruthus, the head of the Association of Female
Lawyers of Liberia (AFELL). “Each day we receive up to six
rape cases at our office,” said Bruthus.
Rape continues to flourish in the Liberia’s camps for displaced
people, according to a study released on Thursday by conflict prevention
NGO International Crisis Group which also report that child rape
may be on the rise.
However, after years of brutal conflict that destroyed state mechanisms
and data, reports are based on anecdotal evidence.
Rape and sexual abuse was a common form of violence during the war
which ended in 2003 and many young girls and women were forcibly
taken as “bush wives” - cooks, cleaners and sex slaves
to the fighters. Prior to last year’s new rape law only gang
rape was a crime.
Despite the passage of a new rape law by Liberia’s parliament
in December, accompanied by a personal pledge from newly elected
President Ellen Johnson-Sirleaf that “no rapist would go unpunished”,
rape prosecutions are progressing achingly slowly, say aid workers.
An awareness campaign using radio jingles and catchy music has been
launched to publicise the rape law. But Chi Mgbako an analyst with
Crisis Group, told IRIN that the law needs to be better implemented.
“There has been a lot of attention given to this new bill,
but unless it is more broadly disseminated around the country women
and men will not be aware of women’s new rights. We need to
hone in on the fact that we can’t just celebrate the rape
bill itself, we also need to implement it,” Mgbako said.
AFELL head Bruthus said Liberian courts have been slow to bring
rape cases to trial. Of 110 rape cases on the court’s dockets,
only five have been assigned for trial during this court term, and
even these are progressing too slowly to be of value to the victims,
according to AFELL.
Many rape or sexual assault victims do not have access to the courts,
said Crisis Group. Traditional leaders are the only recourse open
to many women but many chiefs are reluctant to get involved, the
Crisis Group report added.
“Community members often view rape and other sexual violence
as matters to be settled privately, outside the judicial system,”
said the report, Liberia: Resurrecting the Justice System.
To speed things up, AFELL’s Bruthus recommends the establishment
of a special court just to try rape cases.
“We have petitioned the legislature to have a special court
to deal with rape cases since the other criminal courts are slow
to try them,” said Bruthus.
Liberian legislators have assured AFELL that they would consider
passing a law for such a court.
“AFELL has good concerns that we legislators must give due
consideration to,” Edwin Snowe, the Speaker of the Liberian
Parliament said.
Crisis Group’s report said that reform of the country’s
justice system, including the trial and prosecution of sexual offenders,
needs to be a foremost priority of the new government and donors
if they are to end the culture of impunity.
“After fourteen years of civil war, the system is in shambles.
Impunity prevails...”
From: http://irinnews.org/report.asp?ReportID=52670&SelectRegion=West_Africa&SelectCountry=LIBERIA
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