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RESOLUTION 1325
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Joint UN-Sudan Government task
force to deal with issue of sexual exploitation
18 January 2007 –(UN News Center) As part of the United Nations
zero tolerance policy towards sexual exploitation, the world body’s
mission in Sudan today agreed with the Government and the UN Children’s
Fund (UNICEF) to set up a joint task force to foster coordination,
information-sharing and action to stamp out the problem wherever
it may occur.
The agreement was reached during a one-day workshop in the Sudanese
capital Khartoum that focused on policies aimed at preventing sexual
exploitation and abuse being committed by military personnel, including
peacekeepers, humanitarian workers and others.
“The Task force’s mandate is to coordinate measures
to prevent sexual abuse and exploitation; ensure more effective
communication on the subject between all actors concerned from the
UN and the Government of Sudan; and review existing mechanisms for
reporting, response and follow up on allegations of sexual abuse
and exploitation,” according to a joint press release.
The meeting took place at the initiative of the Sudanese National
Council for Child Welfare (NCCW), and as well as involving the UN
Mission in Sudan (UNMIS) and UNICEF, the African Union Mission in
Sudan (AMIS) also took part.
Participants acknowledged that sexual exploitation and abuse occur
in most communities fragmented by conflict and devastated by war
and poverty, and also that these acts are not exclusive to UN personnel,
military or civilian, humanitarian workers or armed forces and armed
groups of the country concerned.
This latest move to prevent and clamp down upon sexual exploitation
comes after recent media reports of abuses by UN peacekeepers in
southern Sudan, something that Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon and
other top officials have adamantly declared will not be tolerated.Meanwhile
on the ground in Sudan’s strife-torn Darfur region, killings
and burning of villages are continuing, causing hundreds of families
to flee for their lives.
A joint UN assessment team to south Darfur on Tuesday found that
fighting over the past two weeks had left almost 150 people dead,
and over 20 injured, while 12 villages had been burned down leading
to a surge in the number of internally displaced persons (IDPs).
Turning to west Darfur, UNMIS reports that “consistent attacks
from Arab militias” have caused 25 families from the Twonga
area, near the Chad border, to flee to Hassa Hissa, among these
according to a non-governmental organization (NGO) are at least
60 or so people suffering from leprosy.
Also in west Darfur, UNMIS said that since the beginning of the
New Year, about 700 families were reported to have arrived in Zalingei
Hamadia IDP camp having fled harassment from the Abala Arab tribe
in Abata area.
In a related development and as part of its reconstruction efforts,
on Tuesday UNMIS handed over to local authorities in Damazin, Sudan’s
Blue Nile state, a newly constructed police station, built as part
of the Mission’s Quick Impact Projects (QIPs) initiative to
help local communities.
From: http://www.un.org/apps/news/story.asp?NewsID=21274&Cr=sudan&Cr1=
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