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RESOLUTION 1325
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Statement from Civil Society Woman
on Women, Peace and Security
Ms. Agathe Rwankuba, Réseau des femmes pour la défense
des droits et la paix, Democratic Republic of Congo, Security Council
Open Debate, 28 October 2004
Presented in French
My name is Agathe Rwankuba. I am a lawyer at the Bukavu Court of
Appeals and a member of the non-governmental organization Réseau
des femmes pour la défense des droits et la paix, based in
Bukavu, in the province of South Kivu, in the eastern part of the
Democratic Republic of the Congo.
First, I extend my sincere thanks to the Government of the United
Kingdom, the NGO Working Group on Women, Peace and Security, and
International Alert for giving me the opportunity to participate
in this meeting on behalf of the women of the Democratic Republic
of the Congo.
In my statement today, I shall make three specific recommendations
to help the Council in its efforts to eradicate sexual violence
against women. We all are aware of the extent of gender-based violence
in the Democratic Republic of the Congo. For example, in the eastern
part of the country, we believe that at least 35,000 women and girls
have been raped since the beginning of the war in 1996. Given the
extent and the devastating consequences of gender-specific violence
in the Democratic Republic of Congo and many other conflict areas
throughout the world, I would like to thank the Security Council
and the United Kingdom during its presidency for devoting today’s
meeting to this issue.
My first recommendation is that financing allocated to the Human
Rights Section and the Gender Section of the United Nations Organization
Mission in the Democratic Republic of the Congo (MONUC) should be
enhanced in order to establish a genuine partnership with local
women’s organizations. The fact that the Security Council,
by resolution 1565 (2004), has enlarged MONUC’s mandate is
positive. Since December 2002, MONUC’s Human Rights Section
has been working in the province of South Kivu with local women’s
organizations, including my own, in order to identify and rehabilitate
the victims of violence, according to their rights. The organizations
support the women living in the most remote rural regions, to which
MONUC has no access due to lack of sufficient resources. MONUC’s
Gender Section is based in Kinshasa, which is 2,000 kilometres from
South Kivu.
My organization has never had the opportunity to meet a staff member
of the Gender Section. It is clear that the Gender Section should
have greater support in order to form an effective partnership with
women’s organizations.
Secondly, I endorse the recommendation of the Secretary-General
that states that the Security Council, Member States, the United
Nations and other international organizations should “Apply
increased pressure on parties to armed conflict ... to cease all
violations of the human rights of women and girls, including sexual
and gender-based violence”. (S/2004/814, para. 87)
Although the war in the Democratic Republic of the Congo has officially
ended, some local and foreign militias continue to sow terror and
commit sexual violence in the eastern part of the country. The fact
that the Security Council has decided to strengthen the number of
Blue Helmets in my country has given rise to enormous hope among
the local population, especially the women with whom I work every
day. We must earnestly hope that those peacekeeping forces will
help strengthen security in the Democratic Republic of Congo, restore
peace in our region and prevent other crimes.
However, given the great extent of our national territory, the number
of Blue Helmets continues to be clearly insufficient. That is why
I urge the Security
Council to further strengthen their number and presence in the east
of the country as soon as possible, to help the country to work
in consultation with its neighbours to disarm and repatriate foreign
militias, and to apply pressure on countries that still have armed
groups in our country to repatriate them.
Another particularly alarming problem in the Democratic Republic
of the Congo is that some armed groups continue to hold girl soldiers
as sex slaves, thereby excluding them from the disarmament, demobilization
and reintegration (DDR) process. It is imperative that those girls
be included in the MONUC programmes. Therefore I urge the Security
Council to provide the Gender Section and the Human Rights Section
of MONUC with the necessary human and financial resources in order
to collect information on those girl soldiers and ensure that they
are demobilized.
Finally, I recommend that the Security Council,
in accordance with paragraph 87 of the report of the Secretary-General
on women, peace and security, act immediately to put an end to impunity
by means of the following measures. First, there should be an independent
international enquiry to identify in a precise manner those responsible,
individually and collectively, for sexual violence against women during
the war in the Democratic Republic of the Congo.
Secondly, the Human Rights Section and the Gender Section of MONUC
should be requested to work with the Government of the Democratic
Republic of the
Congo, which has ratified the Rome Statute of the International Criminal
Court, to harmonize national legislation with international standards.
The women of South Kivu have mobilized to combat sexual violence and
fight for the vindication of the rights of the victims. The Coalition
Against Gender Violence, of which my organization is a founding member,
has made proposals to reform national criminal law to redefine and
strengthen criminal laws against rape. However, those proposals have
gone unheeded.
Although rape and sexual abuse spare no age group, they particularly
affect the active female population in agricultural areas, which is
the main productive force and essential pillar in any subsistence
economy of the region. The physical and moral damage suffered by those
women has considerably reduced their productivity, thereby exacerbating
the poverty of rural communities.
In that context, it is important for the international community to
provide funds for women’s groups in rural communities, work
in close cooperation with those groups and take into consideration
their point of view in the reconstruction process, as the Secretary-General
recommends in paragraph 88 of his report. The necessary resources
should be provided for programmes that provide care and support to
victims of sexual violence. In particular, all female victims should
have access to medical assistance in order to treat medical problems
resulting from rape and sexually transmitted diseases such as HIV/AIDS.
In conclusion, I express my thanks for the praiseworthy efforts that
have been made so far by the Security Council to bring peace and security
to the women of the Democratic Republic of the Congo. However, I ask
the Council to accept the following three recommendations to better
protect women, prevent renewed violence and encourage the participation
of women.
First, funding has to be increased for the Gender Section and Human
Rights Section of MONUC so that they can work in partnership with
women’s organizations and assist victims of sexual violence.
Secondly, peacekeeping forces in the country need to be strengthened,
and the Gender Section and Human Rights Section of MONUC must receive
human and financial resources so that they can collect information
enabling them to identify girl soldiers and ensure that they are included
in DDR programmes. Thirdly, we must act immediately to put an end
to impunity by urging the Gender Section and the Human Rights Section
of MONUC to advocate legislative reform in the Democratic Republic
of the Congo and by establishing an independent international commission
of inquiry on sexual violence committed during the war in the country.
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