domingo, 10 de maio de 2015

Whistleblower Reinstated in UN Sex Abuse Scandal

Lizabeth Paulat

In late April, after 30 years of service providing humanitarian aid, Anders Kompass was put on suspension by the UN. His mistake? Leaking a report which detailed sexual abuses carried out by French soldiers stationed in the Central African Republic. This week, Kompass made headlines again when a tribunal at the UN ordered his suspension be lifted immediately, calling it “unlawful.”

It all started last summer, when Kompass was made privy to a confidential report detailing a sex-for-food scandal, where children, aged 8-15, were given basic goods in exchange for sexual favors.

The children who were interviewed by UN personnel talk of being raped and sodomized and given ‘sweets’ in exchange. The abuse was allegedly carried out by French peacekeeping troops who were there on a Minusca peace keeping mission. The report also noted that the children they interviewed were likely representative of a much large number of sexual abuse victims.

Kompass became upset when UN officials failed to take action and took matters into his own hands, passing the report along to the French authorities. Members of the French government wrote back, thanking Kompass for bringing the report to their attention and promising to launch a full scale investigation. It seems the UN knew about the correspondence, and didn’t discipline Kompass at the time. Yet months later, he found himself being suspended for “breaching protocols.”

Outrage and headlines reported the suspension and a tribunal was soon set up. Then, on Wednesday, a judge ruled his suspension be temporarily lifted until an internal investigation could be completed. Yet despite this win, many are pointing out that this is all part of a much larger issue.

Paula Donovan, co-director of AIDS Free World, who passed the along the report to The Guardian, told them, “The regular sex abuse by peacekeeping personnel uncovered here and the United Nations’ appalling disregard for victims are stomach-turning, but the awful truth is that this isn’t uncommon. The UN’s instinctive response to sexual violence in its ranks – ignore, deny, cover up, dissemble – must be subjected to a truly independent commission of inquiry.”

It’s true that in many areas of the world UN peacekeeping troops are given a wary eye. This is especially true when it comes to sexual abuse. According to the Christian Science Monitor, women in Kosovo routinely underwent rape and sexual abuse by those on peacekeeping missions. In West Africa, there were reports of aid being withheld in exchange for sex. In the DRC, numerous testimonials regarding the rape of both women and children at the hands of peacekeepers have emerged. And allegations of rape and exploitation from East Timor, Cambodia, Somalia, Burundi and Haiti have also come to light.

The danger of peacekeeping forces has been an open secret for years. In the book Emergency Sex and Other Desperate Measures, a tell-all authored by three former UN workers, Andrew Thompson, who worked in both Rwanda and Bosnia gives this advice to those in war zones: “If blue-helmeted UN peacekeepers show up in your town or village and offer to protect you, run. Or else get weapons. Your lives are worth so much less than theirs.”

Although many inside the UN feel that the actions of a few should not taint the overwhelming efforts of thousands, what is most disturbing is that nothing is coming of these reports without someone breaking protocol. This suggests that peacekeepers perpetrating some of the most violent and despicable acts known to humankind are being routinely ignored by higher-ups within the organization.

This lack of action, oversight and transparency in dealing with sexual assault has created a level of complicity that the UN must work to remedy, rather than suspending those who forced by organizational inaction into making the only ethical choice.

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