UN turns up pressure on peacekeeping nations

Aug 14, 2015

UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon moves to ratchet up pressure on countries whose nationals are accused of sexual abuse.


UNITED NATIONS - UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon on Thursday moved to ratchet up pressure on countries whose nationals are accused of sexual abuse while serving in peacekeeping missions.

Ban outlined a series of steps to the Security Council a day after firing the head of the UN force in the Central African Republic over a string of scandalous allegations of child sexual abuse by the peacekeepers.

Under UN rules, it is up to the troop-contributing country to investigate and prosecute soldiers accused of misconduct while serving under the UN flag.

But Ban said "all too often this is not done quickly enough -- and in the most frustrating cases, it is not done at all."

"I am frustrated by what appear to be far too lenient sanctions for such grave acts affecting men, women and all too often children, " Ban told a two-hour closed-door meeting of the council.

"A failure to pursue criminal accountability for sexual crimes is tantamount to impunity," he said, according to remarks later released by his office.

Ban told the council he plans to name-and-shame countries whose troops face allegations of misconduct in his annual report and asked the council to follow up on all reported cases.

He also informed council members that Parfait Onanga-Anyanga of Gabon would travel to Bangui next week as the new head of mission.

Onanga-Anyanga, who recently served as UN envoy in Burundi, replaces Babacar Gaye (pictured below) of Senegal who tendered his resignation at Ban's request on Tuesday.
 

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US sees gaps

US Ambassador Samantha Power, whose country is by far the largest financial contributor to UN peacekeeper, said "the system as it currently stands has a lot of gaps in it."

Power said UN member-states "have to be on board and enthusiastic about getting to the bottom of allegations" tarnishing UN missions.

Ban earlier spoke by videoconference to the envoys and force commanders and told them they "were directly accountable for maintaining conduct and discipline within their mission," UN spokesman Stephane Dujarric said.

Ban in June appointed a review panel led by former Canadian Supreme Court justice Marie Deschamps to look into how the UN handled allegations that French and African troops sexually abused children in the Central African Republic beginning in late 2013.

The MINUSCA force, which took over from an African Union mission nearly a year ago, has been plagued by a series of allegations involving its soldiers.

So far, there have been 57 claims of misconduct, 11 of which possibly involve child sex abuse.

The latest allegations revealed by Amnesty International involve a 12-year-old girl who told witnesses that she was raped by a UN soldier during a search operation in the Muslim PK5 district of Bangui last week.

The Central African Republic is struggling to recover from sectarian violence that exploded after a 2013 coup, pitting mainly Muslim rebels against Christian militias.


AFP

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