|
RESOLUTION 1325
Full text
History & Analysis
Who's Responsible for Implementation?
1325
Anniversary
TRANSLATING
1325
UNITED
NATIONS
Women
and the UN
Security Council (SC)
Gender & Peacekeeping
1325 Monitor: Women &
Gender in the work of the Security Council
Gender Focal Points
PeaceBuilding Commission
WOMEN, WAR &
PEACE WEB PORTAL
UNIFEM
PeaceWomen
JOIN WILPF

|
|
UN Conducts
Inquiry into Alleged Sexual Abuse by Peacekeepers in Burundi
March 11, 2005 – (UN News) The United Nations,
pursuing its zero-tolerance policy against sexual exploitation and
abuse by peacekeeping operations and mission personnel around the
world, announced today that it was conducting an inquiry into alleged
sexual abuse of minors by troops in Burundi.
Maj. Adama Diop, military spokesman of the UN Operation in Burundi
(ONUB), set up to help restore lasting peace after decades of ethnic
fighting, has been in contact with the Burundian police chief from
the area where the alleged crimes took place, a UN spokesperson
said in New York. No other details were immediately available.
In December ONUB suspended with immediate effect two military peacekeepers
caught in allegations of abuse in Muyinga, on the central African
country's border with Tanzania.
"This mission will not waiver from its responsibility to the
Burundian people and the international community to ensure absolute
implementation of the Secretary-General's zero-tolerance for sexual
exploitation and abuse by United Nations personnel," it said
then.
The main charges of sexual abuse and exploitation have been made
against UN peacekeepers in neighbouring Democratic Republic of the
Congo (DRC), where in November some 150 cases were being investigated.
But in January, the UN Office of Internal Oversight Services (OIOS)
said peacekeeping troops had continued sexual abuse.
The UN forbids peacekeepers to pay for sex or to have sex with girls
younger than 18. In the DRC OIOS said payment ranged from two eggs
to $5 per encounter. Some of the victims were abandoned orphans
and they were often illiterate.
Last month the UN Organization Mission in the DRC (MONUC) welcomed
the Government of Morocco's decision to arrest six of its soldiers
accused of sexual assault on civilians there.
From: http://www.un.org/apps/news/story.asp?NewsID=13623&Cr=burundi&Cr1=
|
|
NEWS
1325
PeaceWomen E-News
Country News Index
International News
Peacekeeping News
RESOURCES
Country
& Thematic
Civil Society, UN & Government
1325
Advocacy Tools
INITIATIVES
In-country
Regional and Global
1325 in Action
ORGANIZATIONS
Country-specific
International
LATEST
PEACEWOMEN UPDATES
PEACEWOMEN
NGO WEB RING
Women, Peace &
Security Community representing the diversity and depth of research, organizing
and advocacy on women, peace and security issues.
|