Top UN rights official urges probes of
sexual violence, disappearances in Darfur
April 06, 2007 – (UN News Centre) The United
Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights today called for investigations
into widespread sexual violence during attacks by Sudanese Government
forces and allied militia in Darfur as well as the disappearance
of over a dozen men allegedly at the hands of rebels there.
In a new report, the High Commissioner's Office
describes attacks in December 2006 in eastern Jebel Marra, Darfur.
At least 15 cases of sexual assault, including rape, had occurred,
according to the report. At least two pregnant women were targeted
in the violence.
“Soldiers came in cars heading towards
the hills. Three were in green military uniform and the fourth
was in civilian clothes. All four of them were armed and all of
them raped me,” said one 13-year old victim, according to
the report.
While some women were raped in the villages,
others were abducted, taken away, raped, and later released.
“Based on testimony gathered, it appears
that rape during the December 2006 attacks was used as a weapon
of war to cause humiliation and instill fear into the local population.
The attacks were indiscriminately aimed at a population of the
same ethnicity as some rebel groups and also resulted in civilian
death and displacement,” the Office of the High Commissioner,
Louise Arbour, said in a statement on the reports.
Along with other recommendations, the High Commissioner
is calling on Government authorities to investigate the attacks.
“The investigation should aim to collect evidence to identify
and prosecute those who planned, orchestrated, and/or conducted
the attacks,” Ms. Arbour said. “The results of the
investigation should be made public, legal action should be taken
against those found to be responsible and the victims of the attacks
should be compensated.”
A second report concerns the enforced disappearance
of at least 19 Massalit men arrested by soldiers serving Mr. Minnawi's
rebel group (SLA-Minnawi) in Gereida in South Darfur on 29 September
2006. The High Commissioner is calling on the head of the group,
Special Presidential Assistant Minni Arkoy Minnawi, who is also
Chairman of the Transitional Darfur Regional Authority, to immediately
disclose the fate and whereabouts of these men.
Several of the men have reportedly been found
dead after having been beaten at an SLA-Minnawi base where leaders
were present.
“If the detainees are alive their physical
integrity must be assured and they should be brought before a
judicial authority,” said Ms. Arbour, adding that the Human
Rights Unit of the UN Mission in Sudan (UNMIS) should be provided
access to all the detainees.
“If the captured persons are dead, there
must be an independent, transparent, and timely inquiry to identify
those responsible and hold them accountable for crimes that may
have been committed,” she said.
The High Commissioner pointed out that the systematic
use of rape to punish and humiliate local communities is a war
crime. It violates Common Article 3 to the 1949 Geneva Conventions,
to which the Sudan is a High Contracting Party, and is punishable
by the International Criminal Court (ICC). The Government has
a duty to hold perpetrators of rape accountable and provide protection
from such a crime.
In February, the ICC's chief prosecutor named
a Sudanese Government minister and a militia commander as the
first suspects he wants tried for war crimes and crimes against
humanity in Darfur.
Luis Moreno-Ocampo has concluded there are reasonable
grounds to try Ahmad Muhammad Harun, former Sudanese Minister
of State for the Interior, and Janjaweed militia leader Ali Kushayb,
for having “jointly committed crimes against the civilian
population in Darfur.”
More than 2 million people have been forced to
flee their homes in Darfur since Government forces and allied
Janjaweed militias began fighting rebel forces in 2003, and at
least 200,000 people have been killed.
From:http://www.un.org/apps/news/story.asp?NewsID=22150&Cr=Darfur&Cr1=