Full UN report
at http://www.un.org/Docs/journal/asp/ws.asp?m=a/59/710
UN Moves On Peacekeeper
Sex Abuse
UNITED NATIONS, March 24, 2005
(AP) A U.N. report on peacekeeper sex abuse released Thursday describes
the U.N. military arm as deeply flawed and recommends withholding
salaries of the guilty and requiring nations to pursue legal action
against perpetrators.
Those recommendations and several others come after repeated allegations
that peacekeepers exploited the very people they were sent to protect.
The report described a troubled system where peacekeepers have often
"failed to grasp the dangers confronting them, seduced by day-to-day
conditions that can be viewed as benign."
It said abuses had been reported in missions ranging from Bosnia
and Kosovo to Cambodia, East Timor, West Africa and Congo. While
allegations of abuse have dogged peacekeeping missions since their
inception 50 years ago, the issue was thrust into the spotlight
after the United Nations found earlier this year that peacekeepers
in Congo had sex with Congolese women and girls, usually in exchange
for food or small sums of money.
"You cannot overstate the value of peacekeeping and what it
can bring to a society, so for that reason I think we must restore
it," Prince Zeid al Hussein, Jordan's U.N. ambassador and the
author of the report, told The
Associated Press before its release.
Secretary-General Kofi Annan appointed Zeid, who once served as
a peacekeeper in Bosnia, to study the Congo abuses and propose changes
to keep them from happening again.
One of his key tasks was finding ways to hold peacekeepers more
accountable in a system where the United Nations has few legal means
to take action and those accused of wrongdoing are often sent home
and never punished.
The task is especially troublesome because the United Nations does
not want to risk offending nations who provide scarce peacekeeping
troops.
In the last several months, Zeid has discussed his proposals with
nations that contribute the most troops - such as Pakistan, Morocco,
Brazil and Bangladesh - and those that fund missions, like the United
States.
"My feeling is that most of the principal troop contributing
countries will agree to this formula," he said.
U.N. peacekeeping missions comprise soldiers, civilians and civilian
police who are held to different standards of conduct. Investigators
appointed to probe crimes often do not feel qualified to handle
the cases.
And sometimes troops and civilians fail to understand the complexities
of the countries where they deploy. That must be counteracted, the
report said.
"There are at least some people in peacekeeping who perceive
it as almost a form of camping," Zeid said. "You can forget
how wounded and traumatized the people you're working with are.
You can make assumptions that you're entering into a normal consensual
relationship if you're a civilian staff member and often those assumptions
may be misguided."
The report makes a host of recommendations, many focusing on ways
to hold peacekeepers more accountable by strengthening the U.N.
rules for nations that contribute peacekeepers.
One idea is that militaries court martial soldiers accused of wrongdoing
in the country where the claims were made. Another asks that nations
agree to refer cases to national courts for prosecution if a U.N.
investigation
finds their peacekeepers committed abuse, Zeid said.
Currently, U.N. troops and employees accused of wrongdoing are
sent home to be dealt with by their own government but are often
never punished.
The United Nations could also withhold salaries for peacekeepers
found guilty and put the money in a fund to care for their victims
or the babies they father.
"There is a need to try to ensure that the fathers, who can
be identified, perhaps through blood or DNA testing, bear some financial
responsibility for their actions," the report said.
The report also calls for the United Nations to form an investigative
arm to pursue misconduct allegations.
With the United Nations burdened by scandals including alleged
corruption in the oil-for-food program in Iraq and allegations of
sexual harassment by U.N. staff, officials have sought to deal with
the peacekeeper sex abuse issue quickly.
Zeid set 2007 as a target date to complete many of his recommendations.
In a clear reference to the United States, he said members' concerns
had weighed heavily when he wrote the report. The United States
contributes about 25 percent of peacekeeping budgets, the most of
any nation.
"Parliaments, and especially those legislatures of the largest
contributors to the U.N. peacekeeping budget, may feel ill at ease
over continuing to extend support to peacekeeping in the absence
of any significant change," Zeid said.
End.