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"No
Go" Zones to Prevent Sex Abuse by U.N. Peacekeepers
By Thalif Deen
April 4, 2005 - (IPS) As charges mount of sexual
abuse and child molestation by U.N. peacekeepers, the Department
of Peacekeeping Operations (DPKO) has drawn up a list of "no
go" zones barring visits by blue-helmeted soldiers and civilian
staff.
The U.N. peacekeeping missions in Cote d'Ivoire, Liberia, Democratic
Republic of Congo (DRC), Ethiopia, Kosovo and Timore-Leste have
established a list of premises and areas -- mostly frequented by
prostitutes -- that will be out of bounds to all U.N. personnel.
"A network of focal points on sexual exploitation and abuse
has been established in all mission headquarters to facilitate receipt
of allegations," the head of DPKO, Under-Secretary-General
Jean-Marie Guehenno, told delegates Monday.
The DPKO has also set up telephone hotlines in Sierra Leone and
Liberia to solicit information on sexual abuse by peacekeepers.
In DRC, where most of the abuses took place, there is a requirement
that all peacekeepers wear their uniforms at all times.
Addressing the U.N. Special Committee on Peacekeeping Operations,
Guehenno said his department has completed investigations into allegations
of sexual exploitation and abuse involving 98 peacekeeping personnel:
77 military and 19 civilians.
So far, he said, three U.N. staff members have been summarily dismissed;
six more were undergoing disciplinary process; and three have been
cleared of wrongdoing.
On the military side, Guehenno said, 66 persons have been repatriated
or sent home on disciplinary grounds, including six commanders.
Prince Zeid Ra'ad al-Hussein, Secretary-General Kofi Annan's adviser
on Sexual Exploitation and Abuse by U.N. peacekeeping personnel,
told the committee that peacekeeping achievements were a source
of great national pride for many nations.
"Those countries sent their women and men to bring peace and
stability to war-torn states, and some even gave their lives to
that noble cause," he said.
So, it was no surprise that acts of sexual exploitation and abuse
"stirred feelings of shame and embarrassment, and sometimes
even denial."
"Everyone should recognise they had a serious problem on their
hands, and ensure that every effort was made to prevent such appalling
conduct from happening again," he noted.
"We must overcome this," he said, adding that it was a
problem that had occurred among the military and civilian personnel
from a wide range of countries in all parts of the world.
"Their representatives in New York had all too often remained
silent out of shame. The silence itself was shameful," he added.
The prince, who is the permanent representative of Jordan to the
United Nations, said his government had to confront some "appalling
cases of criminal conduct by its own peacekeepers," including
a brutal rape of a local woman by a Jordanian civilian police officer
in Timor-Leste a few years ago, and more recently in Kosovo, when
a Jordanian civilian police officer murdered a fellow officer.
After several months of investigations, Prince al-Hussein released
a 41-page report last month on the sexual abuse among peacekeepers
in the DRC.
The report urged the 191-member U.N. General Assembly to authorise
Annan to require DNA or other tests to establish paternity in order
to provide child support for children abandoned by peacekeepers.
The DPKO, which oversees about 17 peacekeeping missions worldwide,
has admitted it is finding it difficult to investigate charges of
sexual exploitation and abuse because "traditional methods
of identification through witnesses have proved difficult, if not
impossible."
Since peacekeeping troops provided by member states are subject
mostly to their national laws, troop-contributing countries are
responsible for the conduct and discipline of their troops.
The report said there is a widespread perception that peacekeeping
personnel, whether military or civilian, who commit acts of sexual
exploitation and abuse rarely if ever face disciplinary charges
for such acts.
Nor are they held to account financially for the harm they cause
their victims. At most, they suffer administrative consequences.
Meanwhile , the U.N.'s Security Council's decision last month to
send in a 10,000-strong peacekeeping force into southern Sudan --
and a gradual increase in troops in the DRC and Haiti -- will nearly
double the annual peacekeeping budget: from about 2.6 billion dollars
in 2004-2005 to over 5 billion dollars in 2005-2006.
At last count, the 10 largest troop contributors to U.N. operations
were Pakistan (8,544 troops), Bangladesh (7,163), Nigeria (3,579),
Ghana (3,341), India (2,934), Ethiopia (2,863), South Africa (2,480),
Uruguay (1,962), Jordan (1,864), and Kenya (1,831).
The total number of U.N. troops, which currently stand at over 58,000,
would increase to over 68,000 when the mission to Sudan is in force.
If a proposed new peacekeeping force is also sent to Somalia later
this year, the total could exceed the all-time high of 78,000 troops
during the world body's peacekeeping peak in 1993.
From: http://ipsnews.net/interna.asp?idnews=28153
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