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Women in
Darfur Look to ICC
By Christine Butegwa
February 28, 2006 -(Institute for War & Peace Reporting) If
you are a woman in the Darfur region of Sudan who has been raped
and you want to lay a charge, it is virtually certain that legal
officers will automatically reduce your allegation to one of assault.
If you persevere with your rape accusation, you will be told to
do the impossible and provide four male witnesses to support your
charge.
As a result, sexual violence goes almost totally unpunished and
is one of the biggest violations of women's rights in Darfur. It
is why members of my organisation, the African Women's Development
and Communications Network, FEMNET, and of other women's rights
groups in Africa have high hopes that the new International Criminal
Court in The Hague will be able to change the situation.
Rape, according to the special report on Darfur by Italian judge
Antonio Cassese for United Nations Secretary-General Kofi Annan,
is of epidemic proportions in Sudan's far western province, a largely
semi-desert area the size of France.
Most of the rape, according to the Cassese report, which is now
the basis of an ICC investigation into human rights crimes in Darfur,
is carried out by government Arab militias called janjaweed (armed
men on horse and camel backs).
The victims are mostly black African Muslim women from the tribes
who inhabit the dry plains and the well-watered mountainous central
area, the Jebel Marra, rising to 10,000 feet. Innumerable accounts
of janjaweed rape have been recorded, including accounts by Judge
Cassese himself, formerly the first president of the war crimes
tribunal set up in The Hague to deal with crimes against humanity
in the former Yugoslavia.
In a typical case, a teenage student told Cassese she had been one
of the victims of mass rape during an assault by janjaweed, wearing
Sudanese army uniforms, on her boarding school at Tawila, north
Darfur. She described to the judge the rape of her best friend and
of other girls in the school.
The Arab militiamen arrived in a lorry early in the morning while
government soldiers surrounded the school, said Cassese in his 176-page
report given to Annan last year.
"When they attacked the boarding house they pointed the guns
at the girls and forced [all 110 of] them to strip naked, took their
valuables and all of their bedding," said the schoolgirl. "[My
friend] was taken from the group, blindfolded, pushed down to the
ground on her back and raped. She was held by her arms and legs.
Her legs were forced and held apart. The rape lasted for about one
hour.
"[Other girls were] screaming as they were raped. After the
rape, the janjaweed started burning and looting."
In the Jebel Marra town of Rokero, an international aid worker described
to the Washington Post's Emily Wax the mass rape by the janjaweed
of some 400 women. "It's systematic," the aid worker told
the reporter. "Everyone knows how the father carries the lineage
in the culture. They [the janjaweed] want more Arab babies [by African
women] to take the land. The scary thing is that I don't think we
realise the extent of how widespread this is yet."
Such reports support independent investigations by FEMNET, the Geneva-based
World Organisation Against Torture and the Amel Centre for the Treatment
and Rehabilitation of Victims of Torture based in Darfur. For example,
seven young women were gathering firewood outside the Deraij refugee
camp in southern Darfur when they were attacked by janjaweed militiamen.
They were beaten with guns on their heads and chests and stripped.
Four of the women escaped, but the other three were taken to an
abandoned hut and mass raped.
One of the women was pregnant and subsequently miscarried. All seven
were treated for serious injuries by Amel Centre doctors.
Since the Darfur conflict began unfolding in February 2003, intolerable
crimes against humanity have been committed in massive and systematic
ways.
More than two million people have been forced to flee their homes
and more than 70,000 people have been killed. Women and children
have been the main target of these atrocities, including mass sexual
violence. They are vulnerable to rape whenever they venture out
of the refugee camps in search of water or firewood.
Despite the fact that rape survivors frequently say they can identify
their attackers, justice has been denied. But now the decision by
the UN Security Council to refer the situation in Darfur to the
ICC may offer the only hope for many women and girls in Darfur to
see justice done.
Women's rights in Darfur are freely violated because of gender-based
discrimination in the national laws of Sudan. According to Jane
Lindrio Alao, a psychologist with the Amel Centre, rape is virtually
impossible to prove in Sudanese law. Most people accused of rape
are only charged with having committed assault, which carries a
maximum jail sentence of one year.
Rape can only be said to have occurred and admitted in court if
there are four male witnesses. "All four should witness the
actual penetration," said Alao. "So even if you could
get two such witnesses, the accused could not be charged. How many
women have the luxury of having witnesses to their rape?"
The archaic and discriminatory laws have led to perpetrators of
sexual violence acting with impunity. Alao confirmed that the majority
of perpetrators of rape in Darfur are from the janjaweed and Sudan's
armed forces.
The Sudanese national courts are affiliated to the government party
and have therefore failed to provide justice to the people of Darfur.
Women who dare to take rape cases to court are frequently arrested
and accused of waging war on the government.
This dire situation is compounded by the fact that the majority
of civil society organisations in Sudan are pro-government and therefore
do not acknowledge rape and other human rights violations as having
occurred in Darfur. "The Amel Centre is the only NGO providing
legal aid for rape victims to seek redress and justice for crimes
committed," said Amel. "Most of the other NGOs deal with
sanitation and other humanitarian efforts."
Previously, most high profile responses to the Darfur tragedy came
from NGOs and governments with headquarters outside Africa. Civil
society in Africa was not raising its voice.
To fill this glaring gap, the Darfur Consortium was created 15 months
ago.
It brought together more than 200 African civil society organisations,
including FEMNET, and campaigned to support Judge Cassese's recommendation
to Annan that the Darfur situation be referred to the ICC for further
investigation. Cassese's report argued that the Sudanese justice
system had shown itself unwilling or unable to prosecute rape and
other human rights offenders.
In March last year the Security Council approved Resolution 1593/2005
granting the ICC jurisdiction to investigate ongoing atrocities
in Darfur.
Although some members of the Security Council, such as Algeria,
Nigeria and the United States, felt that an African tribunal would
be the most appropriate mechanism, the Darfur Consortium argued
that the ICC was both an African and an international mechanism.
According to Dr Yitiha Simbeye, a member of the consortium and dean
at the Faculty of Law in Makumira University, Tanzania, the consortium
further supported the referral to the ICC because it is a permanent
court and this would therefore save on time and resources required
to set up a new special court. "The ICC referral and present
jurisdiction also signals to the Darfurians that the whole world
is concerned with the situation in Darfur," said Simbeye.
The 1997 Rome Statute creating the ICC identifies crimes of sexual
violence such as rape, sexual slavery, enforced prostitution and
forced pregnancy as crimes against humanity when they are committed
as part of a widespread or systematic attack directed against a
civilian population. The ICC has created a Victims and Witnesses
Unit within its Registry at The Hague to provide protective measures,
security arrangements, counselling and other assistance for witnesses
and victims. The ICC therefore offers an alternative avenue for
justice - other than that provided by Sudan - for the women and
girls who comprise almost ninety per cent of the victims in the
Darfur conflict.
Although the ICC has severe limitations, the Darfur Consortium has
high hopes for it. We at FEMNET and other Darfur Consortium members
will give full support to ICC prosecutor Luis Moreno-Ocampo in the
investigation process.
For the women's movement in Darfur, what they are looking for is
fair trials and compensation to the victims of sexual violence.
"Refugees and rape victims among the women are keeping silent
and protecting themselves, waiting for the day of the ICC,"
said Alao.
Christine Butegwa is Communications Officer with the Nairobi-based
African Women's Development and Communication. Network, FEMNET.
From: http://allafrica.com/stories/printable/200603010150.html
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