Sudan: Task Force to
Address Sexual Abuse And Exploitation
February 21, 2007- (IRIN) United Nations agencies
and the southern Sudanese government are to establish a task
force to monitor cases of sexual abuse and exploitation involving
international staff, officials said.
"To my knowledge it would be the first
such task force," David Gressly, UN Deputy Resident and
Humanitarian Coordinator for Southern Sudan, said at a one-day
workshop on the prevention of sexual abuse and exploitation
on Tuesday in the southern capital of Juba.
Participants agreed to launch a public information
campaign against the abuse.
"There are 13 ongoing investigations being
implemented by the OIOS [Office of Internal Oversight Services],"
Aster Zaoude, head of the Conduct and Discipline Unit in the
UN Mission in Sudan (UNMIS), said. Two of the investigations,
she added, could not be substantiated but four military personnel
had been repatriated, as had one member of the UNMIS police.
"There will be incidents; we need to be
prepared to enforce our policies," Zaoude added.
The southern Sudanese Vice-President, Riek
Machar, said: "This is an important workshop and we in
government welcome it, particularly because this was a burning
issue; it will help to clear the air."
The southern Sudanese government, he added, expected to be informed
of reports about sexual misconduct "so that proper action
can be taken in a timely and ordered manner".
The UK's Daily Telegraph newspaper reported
on 4 January that at least 20 children said they had been picked
up in Juba by UN peacekeepers. The children said they had been
forced to have sex, often in official UN vehicles, by the blue
berets, who had been deployed to help stabilise the region after
a 20-year civil war that ended with the signing of a peace agreement
in January 2005. The report, which noted that some of the children
were as young as 12, prompted a UN investigation.
"The GOSS [government of Southern Sudan]
was caught unawares and we were pressed by the world and the
Sudanese people who wanted to know what had happened."
said Machar. He added that the government had also been "in
the dark" about investigations into the crime.
"Our country has been split over the deployment
of UN troops in Darfur," Machar said. "When the press
talked about sexual abuse and exploitation, [certain] groups
used it to try and stop deployment."
The GOSS was caught unawares...and the Sudanese
people wanted to know what had happened
Saying the government would be informed of the outcome once
the investigations were complete, Gressly explained: "We
have agreed to strengthen our contact. It is a concept that
has been agreed to, the challenge is now to take it on and make
it function."
The task force will include Sudanese ministers
and operate under the auspices of the Vice-President.
On the issue of compensation, Gressly said:
"Systems of compensation are already in place for accidents
and so forth; we are trying to identify what the system can
provide in terms of compensation for these kinds of incidents."
The civilian and military arms of the UN operation
had taken measures against possible abuse, in line with the
organisation's zero tolerance policy to sexual exploitation
of children.
The UN Children's Fund, UNICEF, trained more
than 5,000 UN and non-governmental humanitarian and development
staff since 2003 on the prevention of sexual abuse and exploitation.
UNMIS also includes the prevention of sexual abuse and exploitation
in its training programmes, and bans its staff from notorious
bars and market areas at night.
There are thousands of UN personnel and other
aid workers in southern Sudan, but according to Jennifer Kiti,
an expert who set up training and reporting systems on sexual
abuse and exploitation for agencies and NGOs in southern Sudan,
mechanisms to enforce the UN's strict code of conduct issued
in 2003 are insufficient to prevent abuse.
From: http://allafrica.com/stories/200702210720.html