Another Abu Ghraib Scandal

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......except this time its the UN.

I await outrage and condemnation by the ABC and many pages in The Age devoted to this despicable situation.

Kofi's outraged. Perhaps he should resign.

From the news.com.au website


Sex abuse charges rock UN in Congo
By Evelyn Leopold
November 23, 2004

THE United Nations is investigating about 150 allegations of sexual abuse by UN civilian staff and soldiers in the Congo, some of them recorded on videotape, a senior UN official said today.

The accusations include pedophilia, rape and prostitution, said Jane Holl Lute, an assistant secretary-general in the peacekeeping department.

Ms Lute, an American, said there was photographic and video evidence for some of the allegations and most of the allegations came to light since the spring.

"We are shining a light on this problem in order to determine its scope, and we will not stop there," Ms Lute told a news conference. She did not say if 150 different people were involved but indicated some suspects committed more than one offence.

In May the UN reported some 30 cases of abuse among peacekeepers in the north eastern town of Bunia, where half of the soldiers are stationed.

Since then one French soldier was sent home and three UN civilian staff were suspended, with many other cases expected to follow. Reports from the region say soldiers from other nations have also been repatriated to face charges at home.

Jean-Marie Guehenno, the UN undersecretary-general for peacekeeping, went to the sprawling central African country, formally called the Democratic Republic of the Congo, last month. He has promised an overhaul of staff discipline.

The UN internal oversight office is expected to release a report soon on the abuse in Bunia. In addition, the peacekeeping department is sending at least two other teams to Congo to deal with various aspects of the problem, Ms Lute said.

The UN has jurisdiction over its civilian staff but troops are contributed by individual nations. Consequently, the world body has only the power to demand a specific country repatriate an accused soldier and punish him or her at home.

The revelations of peacekeeping abuses is usually kept quiet at the UN until reporters or individual countries disclose the news, as happened in Cambodia in the early 1990s and later in Somalia, Bosnia and Ethiopia.

In the Congo, the UN mission has some 10,800 peacekeepers and some 60 civilian staff, led by an American, William Lacy Swing. The mission has previously released reports of abuses but not details of the ongoing investigation.

UN Secretary-General Kofi Annan last week expressed outrage at the conduct of soldiers and civilians in the Congo.

"I am afraid there is clear evidence that acts of gross misconduct have taken place," he said.

"This is a shameful thing for the United Nations to have to say, and I am absolutely outraged by it," he said while in Tanzania where Mr Guehenno had briefed him.

Mr Annan said the allegations concerned a small number of UN personnel and promised to hold those involved accountable.

"I have long made it clear that my attitude to sexual exploitation and abuse is one of zero tolerance, without exception, and I am determined to implement this policy in the most transparent manner," Mr Annan said.

Reuters
 

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BlueMark

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Reading the report it seems the Un accepts that there is a major problem and is going to deal with it, as they should.......now aren't the Yanks still dodging and weaving over Abu Ghraib. A couple of sacrifical lamb reservists not withstanding.
 
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Perhaps they will deal with it. the problem is its just another in a series of UN scandals that have been flaring up under Kofi's stewardship.

I believe they will deal with it in exactly the same the US has. A couple of minor scapegoats here and there. It's rare anyone senior in the UN carries the can.

Anyway in a sense that's beside the point. I'll be interested to see how much media coverage this gets.
 

BlueMark

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To be honest, bugger all. Does mean it is any less nastybecause of it.

Most of the Haliburton stuff has been supressed as well. particularly in regard to its illegal dealings with Iran.

The probelm with Congo story is that it is not 'sexy' enough.
 

Hawkforce

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Jim Boy said:
I'm sure Fox news will be trawling for every scrap of mud they can fling.
Actually, the sad reality is that Fox news probably couldn't care less about non-US UN officials commiting atrocities on non-US African civilians.

What's even sadder is that YOU care more about Fox news' coverage than the actual abuses themselves.

How's the coverage of France's Ivory Coast "quagmire" going BTW?
 
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