Six-year-olds sexually abused by UN peacekeepers
By Mike Pflanz in Man, Ivory Coast
Last updated: 1:18 PM BST 27/05/2008
Sexual abuse of children as young as six by aid workers and United
Nations peacekeepers has continued unchecked despite repeated promises
to stamp it out, according to a 12-month investigation.
More than half of the children interviewed in three countries, Ivory
Coast, South Sudan and Haiti, knew of cases of forced sex with aid
staff or peacekeepers.
The assaults were often in return for the very food or protection
supposed to be provided to the vulnerable in a crisis.
Similar allegations have dogged UN missions since the organisation sent
peacekeepers to Cambodia in the 1990s. However, today's report, from
Save The Children, is the first to point the finger at civilian aid
staff, including those working for British charities, as well as
soldiers.
Its findings suggest a continuing lack of action despite promises to
tackle alleged abuse made at a conference of UN officials and aid
agencies in December 2006.
"There were men there who called my little brother over and gave him
biscuits," she haltingly told The Daily Telegraph last week in a
village close to the town of Man.
"I refused to go, but one man came to me and held me by my dress and
took me into the bush far from the road. His friends came, there were
10 of them. They held me down and raped me one by one. I could not
flee. They were big men.
Afterwards I ran to my village, I was crying all night and vomiting.
Even today I have medical problems. I can never forget that thing, it
is stuck in my mind and I keep seeing it happen over and over like a
film."
Too fearful to leave the security of her village, she has dropped out
of school. Even now, almost a year later, she says she freezes with
fear whenever she sees a white UN or aid agency vehicle.
Elizabeth's case is not unique among the 341 children interviewed.
A third claimed that they knew of someone in their community who had
been sexually attacked by a peacekeeper or an aid worker.
More than half claimed to know of cases where penniless children, some
as young as six, were forced into sexual acts in return for money or
food.
The overwhelming majority of those interviewed said that they would not
report a case of abuse themselves and had never heard of others doing
so, despite commitments from all humanitarian agencies that allegations
would be dealt with sensitively but firmly.
Heather Kerr, Save The Children's country director in Ivory Coast,
said: "Even one prosecution would show that local authorities will act,
and that would be a big step forward."
A spokesman for the UN's Department of Peacekeeping Operations in New
York said: "The abuse of children by those who are sent to help is a
significant and painful issue and one that we have begun to address. We
are doing everything we can to train and monitor our civilian staff."
Save The Children itself is not immune. There were 15 allegations of
misconduct towards children made against its staff in 2007, three of
which were proven and led to dismissal. Oxfam reported 12 allegations
of exploitation or abuse in 2007, leading to three staff being sacked.
They and other British-based agencies including Plan International,
ActionAid and Care said that they supported the Save The Children
report's call for a global watchdog to police sex abuse by aid staff.
Original
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Six months after that meeting's stern commitments, 12-year-old "Elizabeth" claimed that she was walking to tend her mother's fields past the camp of a battalion of UN peacekeepers in northwestern Ivory Coast.
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