Hybrid Darfur force will help protect lives
of women, says UN institute chief
August 1, 2007 – (UN News) The newly authorized
hybrid United Nations-African Union peacekeeping force in Darfur
can serve as a major step towards saving the lives of vulnerable
women and girls in the violence-wracked Sudanese region, the head
of a UN women’s institute said today.
Carmen Moreno, Director of the UN International
Research and Training Institute for the Advancement of Women (UN-INSTRAW),
said yesterday’s Security Council resolution setting up
the force “has provided an opportunity to put an end to
violence against civilians, especially women, who are in danger.”
Ms. Moreno called on the new peacekeeping operation,
to be known as UNAMID, to treat the protection of Darfur’s
women as a priority.
“Training troops and police on gender issues
before and during their field deployment will strengthen their
ability to prevent the atrocities committed against women,”
she said. “Violence against women can only be tackled from
a gender perspective.”
UNAMID is the first hybrid force involving the
UN and will become the largest peacekeeping force in the world,
with an eventual force of nearly 26,000 troops and police officers.
The mission has been given an initial mandate
of 12 months and will incorporate the existing AU Mission in Sudan
(AMIS), which has been deployed across Darfur since 2004, soon
after deadly fighting erupted between rebel groups, Government
forces and allied Janjaweed militias.
Since then Darfur has become the scene of one
of the world’s worst humanitarian crises, with more than
200,000 people killed and two million others forced to flee their
homes. Rape, sexual enslavement, torture and abductions are also
widespread.
Ms. Moreno said that rape was being used as a
weapon of war, with women and girls – some as young as eight
years old – at risk every day, even when living in camps
for internally displaced persons (IDPs) or refugees.
She added that women are estimated to represent
more than two-thirds of the IDPsscattered across Darfur and the
refugees who have fled to neighbouring Chad or the Central African
Republic (CAR).
From:http://www.un.org/apps/news/story.asp?NewsID=23388&Cr=sudan&Cr1=