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"SYSTEMATIC RAPE" IN
SIERRA LEONEAN WAR
January 16, 2003 (afrol News) Thousands of
women and girls were subjected to individual and gang rape, during
the 10-year civil war in Sierra Leone. All sides in the conflict
had committed "widespread and systematic" sexual violence,
according to a new report. This included the rebel Revolutionary
United Front (RUF), other rebel troops and government and international
peacekeeping forces.
The 75-page report entitled "We'll Kill You If You Cry: Sexual
Violence in the Sierra Leone Conflict," was presented today
by the New York-based organisation Human Rights Watch. The report
shows new evidence of horrific abuses against women and girls in
every region of the country by all parts to the conflict.
- In this report, we have documented unimaginable atrocities against
women in Sierra Leone, said Human Rights Watch's Peter Takirambudde.
"The people responsible for these crimes must be held accountable."
Mr Takirambudde also said the victims of sexual violence urgently
need help to regain their health and reintegrate into their communities.
The report - which is based on hundreds of interviews with victims,
witnesses and officials - details crimes of sexual violence committed
primarily by soldiers of various rebel forces; the RUF, the Armed
Forces Revolutionary Council (AFRC), and the West Side Boys. The
report also examines sexual violence by government forces and militias,
as well as international peacekeepers.
Throughout the armed conflict in Sierra Leone from 1991 to 2001,
thousands of women and girls of all ages, ethnic groups, and socio-economic
classes were subjected to widespread and systematic sexual violence,
including individual and gang rape, and rape with objects such as
weapons, firewood, umbrellas and pestles, the human rights watchdogs
conclude.
These crimes of sexual violence were "generally characterised
by extraordinary brutality and frequently preceded or followed by
other egregious human rights abuses against the victim, her family
and her community," the group says. The rebels abducted many
women and girls, who were subjected to sexual violence as well as
being forced to perform housework, farm work and serve as military
porters.
The rebels had "sought to dominate women and their communities
by deliberately undermining cultural values and community relationships,
destroying the ties that hold society together." Child combatants
had "raped women who were old enough to be their grandmothers,
rebels raped pregnant and breastfeeding mothers, and fathers were
forced to watch their daughters being raped."
The document also examines crimes by government forces, and gives
details of alleged rapes by foreign UNAMSIL peacekeepers - including
soldiers from Guinea, Nigeria, Ukraine, and Bangladesh. This in
particular included the rape of a twelve-year-old girl by a Guinean
soldier in March 2001 and the gang rape of a woman by two Ukrainian
peacekeepers in April 2002. "There appears to be reluctance
on the part of UNAMSIL to investigate and take disciplinary measures
against the perpetrators," the report says. "Reports of
rape by ECOMOG peacekeepers, the majority of whom were Nigerian,
were rare."
To date there has been no accountability for the thousands of crimes
of sexual violence or other appalling human rights abuses committed
during the war in Sierra Leone.
- The war in Sierra Leone became infamous for the amputation of
hands and arms, said Mr Takirambudde. "Rape may not be visible
in the same way, but it is every bit as devastating."
The UN has established a Special Court for Sierra Leone (SCSL) and
a Truth and Reconciliation Commission (TRC) to investigate human
rights violations committed by all parties during the war. Human
Rights Watch has urged both the SCSL and TRC to make sexual violence
and sexual slavery a top priority, and investigate and prosecute
gender-related crimes as crimes against humanity or war crimes.
The group has also urged that the domestic legal system be revised
to ensure that crimes of sexual violence are prosecuted in a sensitive
manner.
- The lack of attention to conflict-related sexual violence means
that few assistance programs have been established for women and
girls who were subjected to sexual violence, including sexual slavery,
the group says. "Survivors not only live with the severe physical
and mental health consequences of the abuses suffered, but also
fear ongoing non-conflict-related sexual violence, largely perpetrated
with impunity."
International donors and nongovernmental organisations should work
together with the government of Sierra Leone to establish programmes
- health care, education, adult literacy, skills training, trauma
counselling and income-generating schemes - that would help to rehabilitate
the survivors of sexual violence, the group recommends.
Source: Based on Human Rights Watch
From: http://www.afrol.com/ms_index.htm
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