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International-UN-NGOs
UN bans peacekeepers from sex with Congolese
2005-02-10
UNITED NATIONS - UN peacekeepers have been banned from having sex with the local population in Congo following allegations of widespread abuse of women and girls, the United Nations said on Wednesday. UN Secretary-General Kofi Annan disclosed the new "non-fraternisation" regulations in a letter to the Security Council in which he called for 100 extra police and French-speaking investigators to "root out" the abuse and prevent further sexual exploitation.
French-speakers to root out sex crimes? The mind boggles.
Over the past year the United Nations has probed 150 allegations against some 50 soldiers of sexual exploitation of women and girls, including gang rapes. Children as young as 12 or 13 were bribed with eggs, milk or a few dollars in exchange for sex, UN reports said.

The new measures were put into place last week by U.S. diplomat William Swing, head of the UN Mission in Democratic Republic of the Congo, known by its French acronym of MONUC, which has some 13,000 military and civilian staff. The new rules would apply only to Congo, which has the largest of the 16 UN peacekeeping missions around the world, UN spokesman Ari Gaitanis said.
Yeah, no fair making UN soldiers elsewhere put up with these rules, eh?
UN regulations for soldiers usually forbid sex with anyone under 18 years of age and forced prostitution. But often officials found there was a fine line between forced and willing sex.
No, there really isn't.
Annan listed the new measures as "establishment of a non-fraternization policy, installation of a curfew for military contingents" as well as specialized training and recreation facilities "to alleviate the concentrated stress present in field missions." Gaitanis said the "non-fraternization" policy applied only to the military but "there is a possibility it may be extended to civilian personnel as well."
Cheez, first they cut the per-diem, then they send the guy to the Congo, and now he can't force the native girls to have sex with him. What's a young Euro-staffer to do in the UN service?
UN officials acknowledged that enforcement would be difficult but said they believed the strict policy would eliminate many abuses.
In the grand European tradition of talking about a problem rather than doing something about it.
Annan vowed that the "entire chain of command" would be held accountable for enforcing a "zero-tolerance" standard.

The United Nations has little recourse against sent as peacekeepers by individual nations except to send them home and insist their country of origin take action. Annan said some 20 cases against military personnel been substantiated. So far the only known prosecution has been by South Africa against two of its soldiers. Among civilians, France jailed a UN staff member on charges of rape and making pornographic videos of children. Allegations have also been made against soldiers from Uruguay, Morocco, Tunisia and Nepal.
No! Not the mighty Uruguayans!
In his six-page letter to the council, Annan recalled that he had expressed "my personal outrage." "I reiterate my stance—one which I know the members of the council share—that we cannot tolerate even one instance of a United Nations peacekeeper victimising the most vulnerable among us," he said.
"Not when there's money to be made!" he added.
Annan noted that the United Nations had sent Angela Kane, an assistant secretary-general, for further investigations and to develop a "sustainable response." Her efforts in the short term would result in a likely increase rather than a decrease in the allegations, he said.

Despite the probes and programs, the UN watchdog agency reported last month that the abuse was continuing. The report in January on the peacekeepers came from the UN Office of Internal Oversight Services and concentrated on Bunia, in the eastern part of the vast central African nation where fighting was intense last year.

Charges of abuses among peacekeepers are not new. Canada and Italy, for example, disclosed more than a decade ago that their soldiers had tortured Somalis. But media reports, especially during the Bosnian war in the 1990s on sex abuse, have multiplied and now UN officials speak about them openly. 
Posted by:Steve White

#5  Identification of culprits should be fairly straightforward: just look for genetically identical venereal disease organisms. In fact, the list of potential culprits would automatically be reduced by those whose disease profiles don't intersect with that of the particular complainant.
Posted by: trailing wife   2005-02-10 3:19:22 PM  

#4  In the former Yugoslavia, UN and NATO peacekeepers fueled the prostitution racket and the attendent sex slave trafficking of several thousand local, Moldovan, Russian, Romanian, and Ukrainian women.
Posted by: ed   2005-02-10 3:02:55 PM  

#3  This is likely to play havoc with the recruiting effort.
Posted by: BH   2005-02-10 1:48:43 PM  

#2  What about Bosnia? Wasn't this also true of the UN Peacekeepers there? (or was it somewhere else... Its getting hard to track all these UN scandals nowdays).
Posted by: CrazyFool   2005-02-10 1:46:36 PM  

#1  excuse me while I go puke.
Posted by: 2b   2005-02-10 1:39:44 PM  

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