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Dark Side
of Peacekeeping
By Julia Stuart
July 10, 2003 (The Independent
London) It was late at night when the woman farmer came out of her
house in the village of Joru in Sierra Leone to go to the lavatory.
She saw a large white truck that had stopped about 50 metres from
her home. It was an unusual sight, so she hid and watched what was
going on. Inside were two white men and a black woman, who was yelling:
"Leave me alone."
"The door was open and one of them was on top of her,"
recalled the farmer, "K", who is in her fifties. "The
lady was really struggling. I saw that one was holding her down
while the other was raping her. I was able to see because the men
had opened the door to the car and the light had come on."
The two men then moved the truck further down the road and stayed
about 30 minutes to rape her again. "I saw both of them have
their turn on her. After they had finished, I saw one of them drag
her out of the cabin and put her in the back of the big truck."
They then drove off.
There is nothing surprising about rape in Sierra Leone. During the
brutal civil war, which was formally declared over in January last
year, it was as common as the notorious mutilations. What made this
crime stand out, however, was that the alleged perpetrators were
peacekeepers from the United Nations Mission in Sierra Leone (Unamsil),
which has been in the country since October 1999. With more than
16,000 troops, it is the largest peacekeeping operation in the world.
"We're all a bit frightened of those Unamsil people now,"
said K. "We tell our girls never to get in a truck with them
or the same thing might happen to them."
In Liberia, fighting between rebels closing in on the capital, Monrovia,
and forces loyal to President Charles Taylor has thrown the country
into chaos. As calls are made for UN peacekeepers to be sent to
there, it is disturbing to learn that K's tale - told in the Human
Rights Watch report, "We'll Kill You If You Cry" - is
far from unique. The report also describes how a 12-year-old girl
was raped in March 2001 by a Guinean peacekeeper manning a checkpoint
after she asked him to help her get a ride to Freetown, the Sierra
Leone capital. A soldier was charged and taken to court the same
day. However, the Sierra Leone Police (SLP) dropped the case and
the soldier was sent back to Guinea.
A month before, a Nigerian peacekeeper reportedly raped a 16-year-old
girl in Freetown. Unamsil said the Nigerian contingent and Unamsil's
Civilian Police Section had investigated and the girl had dropped
the charge. In June last year, a 14-year-old boy was allegedly raped
by a Bangladeshi peacekeeper near the Jui transit camp outside Freetown.
He reported the assault to the SLP and a medical examination confirmed
that penetration had taken place. The Unamsil Provost Marshall took
over the case, but concluded that there was insufficient evidence
to link the crime with the alleged perpetrator. An order of repatriation
was, however, issued.
"What is particularly shocking and appalling is that those
people who ought to be there protecting the local population have
actually become perpetrators," said Steve Crawshaw, the London
director of Human Rights Watch. "It's also very disappointing
that there seems to be a deep reluctance to investigate and prosecute
these very serious crimes. To turn away from a problem like that
is a terrible dereliction of duty."
There are now 13 UN peacekeeping operations around the world, served
by about 39,600 military personnel and civilian police. In 1993,
the UN General Assembly approved a Code of Conduct in operation
for all UN peacekeeping missions. Rule four states that they should
"not indulge in immoral acts of sexual, physical or psychological
abuse or exploitation of the local population or United Nations
staff, especially women and children". Yet a report released
at the end of last year by the UNHCR (the UN refugee agency) and
Save the Children UK on sexual exploitation of refugee children
in Guinea, Liberia and Sierra Leone listed many allegations against
peacekeepers from nine countries. The report claimed that children
as young as five were asked to pose naked by UN peacekeepers in
exchange for biscuits, cake powder and other food.
An investigation into the report by the UN's Office of Internal
Oversight Services found that, of 12 cases it examined fully, none
could be substantiated. The team identified and investigated another
43 cases of possible sexual exploitation. Ten were substantiated.
One involved a peacekeeper (the one accused of the rape of the 14-year-old
boy), who was immediately repatriated.
Brendan Paddy, spokesman for the Save the Children Fund, thinks
the UN has got it wrong. "The report's conclusions cannot be
invalidated by an investigation of a small number of complaints
against individuals which prove to be unsubstantiatable. There is
a very serious problem with sexual exploitation of particularly
young teenage girls, in this case in vulnerable communities, by
a range of people in positions of power."
Nowhere is the problem uglier - or more embarrassing to the UN -
than in Bosnia. The sex-slave industry scarcely existed here until
the mid-Nineties. But when Bosnia, Croatia and Yugoslavia signed
the Dayton accord in 1995 to end the civil war, a team of 50,000
predominantly male peacekeepers arrived. It was made up of about
36,000 military S-For troops, more than 2,000 UN International Police
Task Force (IPTF) officers (whose job was to monitor, train and
advise the local police), and many staff from other UN agencies
and non-governmental organisations (NGOs).
Hundreds of brothels appeared, many staffed by girls and women from
neighbouring countries who had been kidnapped or lured by promises
of respectable employment and sold into sexual slavery.
"There is virtually no dispute any more that the issue of trafficking
arose predominantly with the arrival of the peacekeeping troops
in 1995," says Madeleine Rees, the head of the UN Office of
the High Commission of Human Rights. "This is not to say they
created the market. Traffickers made sure they created the demand."
Last year, Kathryn Bolkovac, a former IPTF officer investigating
human trafficking and forced prostitution, was awarded £110,000
by an employment tribunal in Southampton after she was unfairly
sacked after blowing the whistle on colleagues, including British
men, involved in the Bosnian sex trade. Bolkovac revealed that UN
peacekeepers went to nightclubs where girls as young as 15 were
forced to dance naked and have sex with customers, and that UN personnel
and international aid workers were linked to prostitution rings.
Girls who refused to have sex were beaten and raped in bars by their
pimps while the peacekeepers stood and watched.
Richard Monk, the former IPTF commissioner, who left the post in
1999, said one UN police officer downloaded so much pornography
that he crashed the computer system. "It was deeply embarrassing
to be told by a translator who interpreted in my office that she
had recently visited a police station with one of my colleagues
where police officers were openly complaining that an underage girl
was having a sexual relationship with one of our monitors."
Monk is now the senior police adviser to the Secretary General of
the Organisation for Security and Co-operation in Europe, the biggest
regional security organisation in the world. He says there is not
enough commitment from the countries providing staff to international
organisations to take seriously the required qualities and constraints.
"You must look at the quality of the people you are providing.
I wouldn't have thought anyone needed to be told that you don't
behave like this. So we are clearly recruiting the wrong people."
UN peacekeepers remain under the exclusive criminal jurisdiction
of their own national authorities and therefore have immunity from
local prosecution. If the UN Board of Inquiry finds reasonable grounds
for a charge of serious misconduct, it recommends that the peacekeeper
is repatriated for subsequent disciplinary action in his or her
own country.
Madeleine Rees says that only 24 IPTF officers have been repatriated
to their countries for misconduct. "No peacekeeper has been
prosecuted," she says. "It's outrageous that they can
act with impunity. The UN has no authority to punish offenders;
all it can do is try to ensure that the Code of Conduct is enforced,
and that means repatriating when they offend. Proper investigations
should be held and a file prepared so the accused can contest the
allegations, and if it is shown that there is a prima facie case
it should go back to the peacekeeper's country for further investigation
and a trial, or some form of disciplinary proceeding should take
place. The other option would be for the member state to waive the
immunity and do it there." Peacekeepers commit such crimes,
she says, "because they can get away with it".
In January, the IPTF was replaced by a 500-strong European Police
Mission, with 119 IPTF officers transferring to the new unit. "They
have a very strong code of conduct and a very strong mandate to
combat trafficking. I would hope that they will now assist in dealing
with the problem," Rees says.
Since the United Nations Interim Administration Mission in Kosovo
came into operation in 1999, 10 UN police officers have been involved
in disciplinary offences in connection with prostitutes. Three have
been repatriated for direct offences, and the others were either
reprimanded or repatriated. There are currently about 4,500 UN police
officers stationed in the region as well as 27,000 K-For military
personnel from 38 nations. Prostitution has been a major criminal
activity involving the trafficking of women and girls, though it
has declined in the past two or three years.
Kristine Brubacher set up the UN's Trafficking and Prostitution
Unit in 2000. She has now left the post, but she said at the time:
"The internationals have created and contributed to the problem
because they bring in so much money to what was previously a very
poor region. Because of the money, thousands of girls are now forced
to work in prostitution."
Derek Chappell, the UN police spokesman in Kosovo, denied that peacekeepers
had been a factor in the proliferation of brothels and trafficked
women. He said that interviews with about 1,800 women last year
showed that 70 to 80 per cent of brothel clients were locals. What
of the remaining 20 to 30 per cent? "There are a great number
of foreign workers here with different NGOs," he said.
Kosovo is one of the first UN missions in which the police serve
as proper officers, as opposed to monitors, and there is a discipline
code very similar to that of the British police force, he said.
If an officer is caught in any of the 145 cafes or bars placed on
the "off-limits list" - suspected of being used for prostitution
or illegal activity - he is immediately sent home. "If you
are sent home, if you have broken a police discipline code [in Kosovo]
it is possible that your own force may choose to prosecute you [at
home]," he said.
A UN spokesman said that all allegations of sexual impropriety were
taken "very seriously". "It has been UN policy since
the early 1990s that every allegation made to a UN peacekeeping
mission is investigated," he said. "However, for effective
action to be taken we require the active co-operation of any suspect's
national authorities, as our powers are limited. We provide the
results of our investigation to those authorities and follow up
by asking for information about what action they have taken. We
have developed new procedures to follow up with national authorities
on the subsequent national investigations and institution of disciplinary
Following the UNHCR-Save the Children report and the subsequent
Oversight Office investigation, the UN had taken steps to review
its procedures, strengthen adherence to them and to conduct more
stringent follow-up with states on disciplinary measures they have
taken against repatriated peacekeepers, he said.
Anyone found guilty of misconduct would not be permitted to work
in United Nations peacekeeping again. "However," he added,
"it is worthy of note that acts of serious misconduct are very
rare and that all but a very few peacekeepers work hard to support
the mandate, the mission and the peace process."
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