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UN probing
charges of sex abuse in DR of Congo, peacekeeping official says
November 23, 2004 – (UN) The United Nations
has dispatched two teams to investigate 150 charges of sexual exploitation
and abuse by civilian and military personnel serving in the Democratic
Republic of the Congo (DRC), according to a senior UN official.
The allegations include criminal activity, paedophilia, rape and
solicitation of prostitution, said Jane Holl Lute, an Assistant
Secretary-General in the Department of Peacekeeping Operations (DPKO),
at a press briefing Monday.
To combat the problem, the Department will deploy a special investigative
team to come up with short- and long-term strategies to deal with
such cases at peacekeeping missions, she said.
"We recognize that sexual exploitation and abuse is a problem
in some missions and we're working for a systematic and coordinated
approach to strengthen the measures we have in place," she
said. "It's obvious that the measures we have had in place
have not been adequate to deal with the changing circumstances found
in some missions."
Last Friday, Secretary-General Kofi Annan issued a statement voicing
his outrage at the accusations and pledging to stamp out such behaviour.
"I am afraid there is clear evidence that acts of gross misconduct
have taken place. This is a shameful thing for the United Nations
to have to say, and I am absolutely outraged by it," he said.
Referring to the UN Organization Mission in the DRC, he added: "We
cannot rest until we have rooted out all such practices from MONUC
, from any other peacekeeping operation, and indeed anywhere in
the Organization that they might occur. And we must make sure that
those involved are held fully accountable."
MONUC, which was set up in 1999, comprises nearly 1,000 international
civilian staff and 11,000 uniformed military and police personnel
contributed by over 50 countries.
Ms. Lute told journalists that a number of the allegations were
specific to Bunia, located in the northeastern DRC, and that the
Office of Internal Oversight Services (OIOS) would be issuing a
report on its investigation soon. While that was going on, she added,
rapid response investigative teams made up of military, police and
civilian experts would address the other allegations throughout
the Mission.
In addition to that, the Department of Management, the Office of
Human Resources Management (OHRM) and DPKO had organized a team,
which arrived Monday in the DRC, to investigate cases involving
civilians, Ms. Lute said. If those investigations confirmed the
basis of the allegations, additional procedures would be taken consistent
with staff rules and instructions.
She said DPKO was doing everything it could on a systematic basis
to respond aggressively to the problem. "We are shining a light
on this problem in order to determine the scope that it represents,
and we will not stop there," she stressed.
In July the Secretary-General appointed Prince Zeid Ra'ad Zeid Al-Hussein,
the Permanent Representative of Jordan, as an adviser on the question
of sexual exploitation. He has already visited the DRC to get a
first-hand understanding of the nature of the problem, and spoken
to a number of Member States about addressing system-wide approaches
to deal with the issue.
From: http://www.un.org/apps/news/ticker/tickerstory.asp?NewsID=12623
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