|
RESOLUTION 1325
Full text
History & Analysis
Who's Responsible for Implementation?
1325
Anniversary
TRANSLATING
1325
UNITED
NATIONS
Women
and the UN
Security Council (SC)
Gender & Peacekeeping
1325 Monitor: Women &
Gender in the work of the Security Council
Gender Focal Points
PeaceBuilding Commission
WOMEN, WAR &
PEACE WEB PORTAL
UNIFEM
PeaceWomen
JOIN WILPF

|
|
UN ACCUSES SUDANESE MILITARY,
ALLIED MILITIAS OF POSSIBLE WAR CRIMES
August 21, 2007 - (UN News) The Sudanese military
and allied armed groups abducted women and girls and kept many as
sex slaves for a month after an attack on villages in Darfur near
the end of last year, the United Nations human rights office reported
today, saying the abuses may constitute war crimes before the International
Criminal Court (ICC) and naming individuals who could be held responsible.
The Office of High Commissioner for Human Rights (OHCHR) Louise
Arbour called on the Sudanese Government to set up an independent
investigation into the events that followed the attack on Deribat
and eight other villages in the East Jebel Marra region of South
Darfur state in late December 2006.
In a report released today, issued with the UN Mission in Sudan
(UNMIS) as a follow-up to an April report on the same events, OHCHR
recommended, among others, that anyone suspected of being responsible
for the abductions, rapes or sex slavery should be brought to justice
in trials that meet international standards of fairness.
Any member of the Sudanese armed forces suspected of committing
or ordering the abuses should be suspended immediately pending an
inquiry, the report stated, adding that the Government should also
ensure full reparations including compensation for the victims and
their families.
Khartoum must protect women and children from sexual and gender-based
violence, according to a statement accompanying the report, which
was based partly on testimony given by victims and eyewitnesses
during a field trip by UNMIS human rights officers.
It said the Government was responsible for the actions of its armed
forces and for other informal allied groups or militias that were
involved, particularly the Popular Defence Forces (PDF) and the
Sudan Liberation Army/Abu Gasim faction.
More than 200,000 people have been killed and over 2 million others
forced to flee their homes since 2003 because of fighting between
rebel groups, Government forces and allied militias. Last month
the Security Council approved the creation of a hybrid UN-African
Union force (to be known as UNAMID) to quell the violence.
The OHCHR report noted that after UN officials presented their initial
conclusions to local authorities in Nyala, the capital of South
Darfur, no investigations were carried out, although authorities
indicated they have sent the allegations to the Sudanese military.
Witnesses testified that several hundred armed men on horseback
and camelback attacked Deribat on the morning of 26 December, joined
by an aircraft and at least three vehicles. The attackers then rounded
up many women and children from the town and took them to a nearby
stream, where they camped and began to systematically rape the women
and girls, often in front of the other captives.
One witness told UN investigators that the women were badly beaten
if they did not comply. The abducted women and children were held
for about a month, and some of the women became pregnant or experienced
serious physical injuries as a result of the rapes in addition to
the widespread psychological trauma suffered by victims. No formal
medical treatment and little food were provided, and the women were
forced to cook and serve food for their abductors.
UNMIS human rights officials said the pattern of attacks in the
Jebel
Marra region suggested that the victims in Deribat were targeted
because the local Fur community was perceived as being sympathizers
of rebel groups that have not signed the Darfur Peace Agreement
(DPA) with the Government.
The officials said information gathered indicated that the following
persons may share criminal responsibility for leading or authorizing
the attack on Deribat and the subsequent rapes and abductions: Ali
Mohammed Hussein, a former sergeant in the Sudanese armed forces
and now a PDF commander; Yousif Ali Yousif, a PDF commander in the
Malam area; and Hamid Mohammed Hamdan, a militia commander with
the allied Mahamid tribe.
The report stressed that the information obtained in the testimony
indicated a series of violations of international human rights law
and international humanitarian law, and possibly war crimes as well.
If rape, sexual slavery or any other form of sexual violence of
comparable gravity are committed as part of a widespread or systematic
attack directed against civilians [they] can constitute a crime
against humanity, and potentially fall within the jurisdiction of
the International Criminal Court.
In February, the ICC?s chief prosecutor Luis Moreno-Ocampo 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.
From:http://www.un.org/apps/news/story.asp?NewsID=23564&Cr=sudan&Cr1=
|
|
NEWS
1325
PeaceWomen E-News
Country News Index
International News
Peacekeeping News
RESOURCES
Country
& Thematic
Civil Society, UN & Government
1325
Advocacy Tools
INITIATIVES
In-country
Regional and Global
1325 in Action
ORGANIZATIONS
Country-specific
International
LATEST
PEACEWOMEN UPDATES
PEACEWOMEN
NGO WEB RING
Women, Peace &
Security Community representing the diversity and depth of research, organizing
and advocacy on women, peace and security issues.
|