|
UN hosts meeting aimed at
tackling problems of sexual abuse by field personnel
December 4, 2006 – (UN News Centre) DNA samples,
new international pacts and assistance to victims were among the
measures discussed today at a conference on preventing sexual exploitation
and abuse by United Nations and non-governmental organization (NGO)
personnel, where Secretary-General Kofi Annan set a strict tone
by declaring that no one should be above the law. Almost 150 different
agencies and country representatives, including diplomats and other
officials, gathered at UN Headquarters in New York for the event.
Paying tribute to the vast majority of upstanding
personnel who serve under difficult conditions, the Secretary-General
called it “tragic and intolerable that those contributions
are undermined by the small number of individuals among them who
have engaged in acts of sexual exploitation and abuse.” He
decried the damage caused by these acts, including “great
harm to women and children who already face extreme hardship and
violations in their daily lives,” and condemned sexual exploitation
and abuse as “utterly immoral, and completely at odds with
our mission.”
Three years ago, the Secretary-General instituted
special measures spelling out prohibited sexual conduct applied
to all UN staff, as well as uniformed personnel. In his remarks
to the conference, he said those steps had been effective. “Today,
our personnel are better informed about what is expected of them.
Allegations of exploitation and abuse are being handled in a more
systematic and professional manner. Staff who commit such acts are
being fired. And uniformed peacekeeping personnel are being sent
home and barred from future peacekeeping service, and also in the
expectation that their own governments will deal with them.”
At the same time, he acknowledged the need for
more action. “My message of zero tolerance has still not got
through to all those who need to hear it – from managers and
commanders on the ground, to all our other personnel.” In
response, Mr. Annan called for fostering “an environment in
which people feel able to report abuses without fear of retaliation”
and said he has drafted a policy statement and comprehensive strategy
on assistance to victims of sexual exploitation and abuse by UN
personnel. “I look forward to the discussions that the Member
States will have on the proposal later this month,” he said.
Declaring that “no one in the UN is above
the law,” he said a new report includes proposals for a binding
treaty on the matter. Mr. Annan, who completes his decade-long service
at the helm of the UN at the end of this year, predicted continued
focus on the problem. “I am sure that my successor will take
this issue every bit as seriously, and will, therefore, find the
work of this conference very useful,” he said.
The Secretary-General’s Adviser on Sexual
Exploitation and Abuse by UN Peacekeeping Personnel, Prince Zeid
Ra’ad Zeid Al-Hussein of Jordan, agreed on the importance
of the conference “to develop a common understanding and appreciation
of the diagnosis and the remedies to be decided upon.” He
stressed the need to understand that only host countries or the
national States of individuals suspected of abuse could exercise
authority. “When you look at UN peacekeeping missions or other
humanitarian presences the situation is made worse when you don’t
have a complete judicial system in place in those particular countries.”
He also emphasized that more progress is needed
in legislating against sexual exploitation and abuse. Efforts were
under way to draft memoranda of understanding to be signed by the
UN and contributing countries outlining what each could expect of
the other, he said. Another document, on assistance to victims,
“is groundbreaking in many areas,” the Prince said.
“There was some discussion within the Secretariat about DNA
sampling which I personally believe is absolutely appropriate,”
he said, “the idea being that anyone who serves in the field
provides a sample of their DNA and on completion of duty that sample
is returned to them. It makes investigations easier and it is a
considerable deterrent.”
Negotiations will be held next year to examine
a possible treaty. “The idea here is that you will always
have some jurisdiction covering the actions of a UN peacekeeper.”
Prince Zeid voiced hope that “once we have this comprehensive
strategy in place, the culture will follow.” Speaking at a
press briefing held in conjunction with the conference, Jasmine
Whitbread, the Chief Executive of Save the Children, welcomed what
she termed “leadership and commitment at the highest UN levels”
to address the problem across the UN system.
UN Assistant Secretary-General for Peacekeeping
Operations Jane Holl Lute stressed that there are nearly 100,000
peacekeepers in the field and because of the high turnover rates,
the UN effectively manages about twice that number each year. “The
vast majority of them serve honourably with pride and purpose,”
she said. “It is in their honour that we are pursuing this
agenda so vigorously to root out even a single instance of this
behaviour where it occurs.”
Meanwhile in Liberia, the Government, together
with national and international partners, today launched a campaign
to combat sexual exploitation and abuse, the UN mission there (UNMIL)
announced. “Zero tolerance is the norm,” the Secretary-General’s
Special Representative, Alan Doss, told a ceremony attending also
by Liberian President Ellen Johnson-Sirleaf. “We have a duty
of care as UN staff to help the people of Liberia and not contribute
to the trauma they have suffered; this is why we must be part of
the solution and not a cause of the problem.”
From : http://www.un.org/apps/news/story.asp?NewsID=20842&Cr=sexual&Cr1=abuse
|