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NEWS
UN JOINS INQUIRY INTO
REPORTED SEX ABUSE BY AFRICAN UNION TROOPS IN DARFUR
New York, May 5 2006 12:00PM
Following recent media reports of alleged sexual violence, including
rape and child abuse, by African Union (AU) forces monitoring the
conflict in Sudan's Darfur region, the United Nations Development Fund
for Women (<"http://www.unifem.org/news_events/story_detail.php?StoryID=448">UNIFEM)
will participate in the AU's newly established Committee of Inquiry.
UNIFEM Regional Programme Director in East and Horn of Africa, Nyaradzai
Gumbonzvanda, welcomed the urgency with which the Committee was set up
after the reports, saying it gives a ray of hope to African women,
children and survivors of violence that impunity and inaction by
authorities is being seriously dealt with.
"It sends immediate warning bells to perpetrators of sexual and gender
based violence that impunity will no longer be the order of the day in
Africa," she declared.
The Committee will examine the contents of a BBC Channel 4 television
documentary to establish its veracity or otherwise, identify those
responsible for the violations and make recommendations on appropriate
sanctions.
The UN has a policy of zero tolerance of sexual exploitation and abuse
by its own staff, particularly peacekeepers in the field, imposed
following allegations in 2004 against peacekeepers in the Democratic
Republic of the Congo (DRC). At the time the UN Office for Internal
Oversight Services (OIOS) cited payments ranging from two eggs to $5 per
encounter. Some victims were abandoned orphans who were often
illiterate.
In February, Under-Secretary-General for Peacekeeping Jean-Marie
Guéhenno told the Security Council that significant progress had been
made in dealing with the problem but much more needed to be done. He
said that last year investigations had been completed into allegations
of sexual abuse involving 296 peacekeeping personnel. 2006-05-05
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