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UN's legacy of shame in Timor
July 22, 2006 (The Age) United Nations peacekeepers have abandoned
at least 20 babies fathered with poverty-stricken Timorese women.
A UN investigation has also uncovered a culture of cover-up, in
which babies born to peacekeepers and sex crimes committed by UN
staff in the past seven years have been kept secret because of a
"fear of shame and embarrassment' in the deeply religious country.
The findings will shock the UN bureaucracy
as it prepares to boost by thousands its peacekeeping force in East
Timor.
A report on the investigation, obtained by The Age, recommends that
a policy of zero tolerance of sexual misconduct be enforced on UN
staff sent to help rebuild the country after two months of violence.
UN peacekeepers in East Timor have previously been accused of offences
including child sex abuse, bestiality, and coercing women and children
into prostitution. No one has ever been charged.
But the report reveals for the first time that babies born to UN
peacekeepers have been abandoned without financial support.It also
makes clear that the births of these children, and other instances
of sexual misconduct by UN personnel, are likely to have been significantly
under-reported.
The report says that the Timorese mothers of the babies fathered
by peacekeepers have been stigmatised and, in some cases, ostracised
by their communities. It also found that efforts within the UN to
organise help for the women have failed.
In the mountainous coffee growing district of Ermera, soldiers have
left behind seven young children after earlier promising to marry
their mothers, the report says. In the district of Bobonaro, four
babies were allegedly fathered by two UN police and two civilian
staff.A dowry was apparently paid to one family. But in most cases,
the mother's family has been left to support the children.
The report was written by Sofi Ospina, an anthropologist commissioned
by the UN to investigate the gender-related impact on East Timor
of having 18,000 uniformed and civilian UN personnel from 113 nations
in the country after UN operations began in 1999.
It comes as Secretary-General Kofi Annan prepares a report for the
UN Security Council on the composition of a new mission for East
Timor when the current one expires next month.
Ian Martin, a special UN envoy, has recommended the Security Council
send police units backed by a rapid response force. He also recommends
a military presence at least until after elections scheduled for
May, and UN advisers to help organise the vote.
There are now 2500 Australian soldiers
and police in East Timor, mostly in the capital, Dili.While thousands
of Australian soldiers and police have served in East Timor since
1999, none have been accused of sexual misconduct. The behaviour
of some peacekeepers has outraged many UN staff, several of whom
have resigned in disgust.
In one of the worst instances detailed in Ms Ospina's report, a
peacekeeper from an unnamed country is alleged to have abused two
boys and two girls in the enclave of Oecussi.
In early 2001, two soldiers were sent home with injured penises
after allegedly attempting sexual intercourse with goats.
Ms Ospina says that, as in other UN operations, the arrival of peacekeepers
has attracted prostitution. She refers to a study showing that in
2004 there were 250 female and 110 male sex workers in Dili. Of
the males, 75 per cent were younger than 18.
The report says the fear and reluctance to report sexual misconduct
by UN personnel may be justified. Both the perpetrators and, usually,
the person to whom such cases would be reported are men in positions
of relative power, the report says.
Local administrative authority is usually embedded in a traditional
mind-set influenced by conservative Catholic ideology, it says.
Women may expect not to receive a sympathetic hearing in such a
context.
The report warns that the UN's credibility could be compromised
by its inability to ensure that staff who commit sex crimes are
prosecuted.
It recommends that commanders should communicate and enforce a policy
of zero tolerance for sexual misconduct.
There should be immediate repatriation and disciplinary measures
for all offenders.The report says that accusations and rumours of
sexual abuse should be investigated. Pregnancies and births resulting
from sex with Timorese women should be documented and the UN should
make sure that non-government organisations help the mothers and
their children.
From: http://www.theage.com.au/articles/2006/07/21/1153166587803.html#
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