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The Weapon of Rape
By NICHOLAS D. KRISTOF
June 15, 2008 - (New York Times) World leaders
fight terrorism all the time, with summit meetings and sound bites
and security initiatives. But they have studiously ignored one of
the most common and brutal varieties of terrorism in the world today.
This is a kind of terrorism that disproportionately targets children.
It involves not W.M.D. but simply AK-47s, machetes and pointed sticks.
It is mass rape — and it will be elevated, belatedly, to a
spot on the international agenda this week.
The United Nations Security Council will hold a special session
on sexual violence this Thursday, with Condoleezza Rice coming to
New York to lead the debate. This session, sponsored by the United
States and backed by a Security Council resolution calling for regular
follow-up reports, just may help mass rape graduate from an unmentionable
to a serious foreign policy issue.
The world woke up to this phenomenon in 1993, after discovering
that Serbian forces had set up a network of “rape camps”
in which women and girls, some as young as 12, were enslaved. Since
then, we’ve seen similar patterns of systematic rape in many
countries, and it has become clear that mass rape is not just a
byproduct of war but also sometimes a deliberate weapon.
“Rape in war has been going on since time immemorial,”
said Stephen Lewis, a former Canadian ambassador who was the U.N.’s
envoy for AIDS in Africa. “But it has taken a new twist as
commanders have used it as a strategy of war.”
There are two reasons for this. First, mass rape is very effective
militarily. From the viewpoint of a militia, getting into a firefight
is risky, so it’s preferable to terrorize civilians sympathetic
to a rival group and drive them away, depriving the rivals of support.
Second, mass rape attracts less international scrutiny than piles
of bodies do, because the issue is indelicate and the victims are
usually too ashamed to speak up.
In Sudan, the government has turned all of Darfur into a rape camp.
The first person to alert me to this was a woman named Zahra Abdelkarim,
who had been kidnapped, gang-raped, mutilated — slashed with
a sword on her leg — and then left naked and bleeding to wander
back to her Zaghawa tribe. In effect, she had become a message to
her people: Flee, or else.
Since then, this practice of “marking” the Darfur rape
victims has become widespread: typically, the women are scarred
or branded, or occasionally have their ears cut off. This is often
done by police officers or soldiers, in uniform, as part of a coordinated
government policy.
When the governments of South Africa, China, Libya and Indonesia
support Sudan’s positions in Darfur, do they really mean to
adopt a pro-rape foreign policy?
The rape capital of the world is eastern Congo, where in some areas
three-quarters of women have been raped. Sometimes the rapes are
conducted with pointed sticks that leave the victims incontinent
from internal injuries, and a former U.N. force commander there,
Patrick Cammaert, says it is “more dangerous to be a woman
than to be a soldier.”
The international community’s response so far? Approximately:
“Not our problem.”
Yet such rapes also complicate post-conflict recovery, with sexual
violence lingering even after peace has been restored. In Liberia,
the civil war is over but rape is still epidemic — and half
of all reported rapes involve girls younger than 14.
Painfully slowly, the United Nations and its member states seem
to be recognizing the fact that systematic mass rape is at least
as much an international outrage as, say, pirated DVDs. Yet China
and Russia are resisting any new reporting mechanism for sexual
violence, seeing such rapes as tragic but simply a criminal matter.
On the contrary, systematic rape has properly been found by international
tribunals to constitute a crime against humanity, and it thrives
in part because the world shrugs. The U.N. could do far more to
provide health services to victims of mass rape and to insist that
peacekeepers at least try to stop it.
In Congo, the doctors at Heal Africa Hospital and Panzi Hospital
(healafrica .org and panzihospitalbukavu.org) repair the internal
injuries of rape victims with skill and humanity. But my most indelible
memory from my most recent visit, last year, came as I was interviewing
a young woman who had been gang-raped.
I had taken her aside to protect her privacy, but a large group
of women suddenly approached. I tried to shoo them away, and then
the women explained that they had all been gang-raped and had decided
that despite the stigma and risk of reprisal, they would all tell
their stories.
So let’s hope that this week the world’s leaders and
diplomats stop offering excuses for paralysis and begin emulating
the courageous outspokenness of those Congolese women.
From:http://r.smartbrief.com/resp/ltxAsebkkJbOfECibSlgDUev?format=standard
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