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International-UN-NGOs
Peacekeeper sex abuse 'too high'
2006-02-25
Hat tip to the Captain.
There are still too many complaints of sexual abuse against United Nations troops, the head of peacekeeping operations has said. Jean-Marie Guehenno said the UN had investigated 295 cases under a new reporting system introduced last year.
That's about 295 too many.
It could take several more years to reform the system fully, says Jordan's UN envoy who last year urged changes.

The 18 peace missions worldwide employ 85,000 staff from over 100 countries, with a budget of nearly $5bn.

Mr Guehenno said although significant progress had been made in reducing the number of cases of sexual exploitation following an investigation in the Democratic Republic of Congo two years ago, much more needed to be done. "Allegations being lodged against UN peacekeeping personnel remain high and unacceptably so," he said. He noted "how hard it is to change a culture of dismissiveness, long developed within ourselves, in our countries and in the mission areas."
It's not hard at all. Investigate the first claim, and if the perpetrators are guilty, send them to Gitmo for 20 years in the slammer. Gitmo is convenient, well-run, and it would shut up all the protesters, so it's a win-win for everyone. Do this once or twice and watch the behavior of the UN peacekeepers change.
Mr Guehenno said only the strict enforcement of a complete ban on prostitution in areas occupied by peacekeepers could strengthen the UN's policy of zero tolerance against sexual exploitation.

Jordanian UN ambassador Prince Zeid Ra'ad Zeid al-Hussein said the increase in allegations was "not entirely unexpected" since there was now a system in place to facilitate complaints.
"Before we just brushed the allegations under the table, but now the peasants are complaining. It's so inconvenient," he noted.
Briefing the UN Security Council on how the problem was being addressed, the ambassador said it could take three to four years for the reform programme fully to take hold.
Posted by:Steve White

#8  The Congo op may be "infamous" in this regard, but I think that there were accusations thereof in Liberia as well.
Posted by: Edward Yee   2006-02-25 18:21  

#7  Broadhead6, there was a pretty nasty case in the AO involving "a senior French official," but he wasn't a peacekeeper (even nominally), so he doesn't count I guess.

The ones I've heard about were Jordanian (the case with the Aussie -- which ended up with Australian Steyr AUGs pointed in the general direction of Jordanian M16s and vice versa) and Pakistani.
Posted by: Edward Yee   2006-02-25 18:20  

#6  Raping women and children... must be one of those Arab / Muslim cultural things I keep hearing I should 'respect'....

Ah.... no!
Posted by: CrazyFool   2006-02-25 16:04  

#5  Most of these countries don't know how to train or what it means to be a professional warrior. Discipline & Spirit are two key ingredients. Raping women and children doesn't qualify you for it either..

That's a 'good to go' Broadhead.
Posted by: lotp   2006-02-25 15:58  

#4  IIRC, last year I linked an article about an australian soldier having to be evacuated from Timor after he denounced to the UN hierarchy a jordanian "peacekeeper" having forced a young local boy to perform oral sex on him; his safety couldn't be assured, so he had to be evacuated.

I'm pretty sure the peacekeepers from non-western (or at least non-western standards) militaries may be a real danger to the population they're supposed to guard, without even acknowledging their potential bias (such as muslim troops aiding albanian kosovars against the serb minority supposedly under their protection).
Posted by: anonymous5089   2006-02-25 15:42  

#3  Do they have an empirical breakdown of complaint by country? I'd like to know who are the most accused entities. Was the majority of abuses from the Congo op?

Most of these countries don't know how to train or what it means to be a professional warrior. Discipline & Spirit are two key ingredients. Raping women and children doesn't qualify you for it either....just a bunch of third-string blue-headed clowns in tree suits.
Posted by: Broadhead6   2006-02-25 15:20  

#2  Zero is the correct number. Saying it will take time isn't good enough.
Posted by: SPoD   2006-02-25 15:10  

#1  excuse me while I go throw up. Can you imagine the outcry if it was the US military instead of the UN?

The sooner we kick the evil UN off our soil, the better. Kill it. Nothing good has come from it. Nothing.
Posted by: 2b   2006-02-25 14:57  

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