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UN Reports Sharp Rise in
Violence Against Women, Girls in Darfur
By Catherine Maddux
October 9, 2006 - (VOA) The United Nations says sexual violence
against women and girls in Sudan's troubled Darfur region has soared
in recent months, along with an overall deterioration of security.
A coalition of U.N. agencies says the alarming increase in violent
attacks against women and children in Darfur has risen ever since
the signing of a peace accord between the Khartoum government and
one rebel group earlier this year.
Gordon Weiss, a spokesman for the U.N. Children's Fund, says it
is clear the security situation is getting much worse for the civilian
population in Darfur. "If you put this in context, which is
a general deterioration of the security situation since the signing
of the Darfur Peace Agreement some months ago, and there has been
a great deterioration in the security situation, and there has been
a consequent upsurge in violence across the board," he said.
"And, as part of that, we received an increase in reports
of sexual violence." He says the attacks often occur, as they
have throughout the three-year-long war, when women leave camps
for internally displaced persons to collect water and firewood for
cooking or selling. He also says patrols by African Union forces
in and around the camps, some of which are home to tens-of-thousands
of people, have been greatly reduced.
A.U. forces have come under attack and have been stretched far
beyond their capacity to protect civilians. Weiss and other U.N.
officials say it is impossible to know exactly which armed groups
are behind the rapes and sexual assaults.He says that is because
since the accord was signed, rebel and proxy government forces split,
and began fighting one another.
"We have now the rebel group, who did sign the agreement,
fighting with two of the groups who did not. We have splintered
groups within those groups," he said. "And, the situation
in general has become a lot more conflicted, a lot more unpredictable
and a lot more difficult for humanitarian agencies to operate in,"
continued Weiss.
"Our access has really been reduced since the signing of the
agreement. And provisions in the agreement, which specifically prescribed
security measures for the camps have never been put in place."
U.N. agencies say women and children in Darfur who are victimized
often do not have a reliable legal system to turn to when they report
being raped.
"Given the complexity of the situation, and the violence of
the situation, I think, all these systems simply are not sufficient
to deal with the magnitude of the problem," noted Pamela Delargy,
the chief of humanitarian response at the U.N. Population Fund.
"And, despite the good will of many local authorities in Sudan,
the overall judicial and legal system is not very functional in
Darfur right now. "
The U.N. agencies say the African Union must resume regular patrols
in and outside the camps. They are calling for the warring parties
to sign on to the peace deal, and to ensure that humanitarian groups
providing support to victimized women and children are allowed to
do so in a secure environment.
From: http://www.voanews.com/english/2006-10-09-voa46.cfm
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