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RESOLUTION 1325
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The First Casualties in
Wartime Happen to be Women
June 2, 2008 – (Daily Star) Truth is often said to be the
first casualty in wartime. But if the real truth is told, it is
women who are the first casualties. In conflict zones, the United
Nations children's agency UNICEF recently observed, sexual violence
usually spreads like an epidemic. Whether it is civil war, pogroms,
or other armed conflicts, all too often women's bodies become
part of the battlefield. The victims of large-scale sexual atrocities
range from baby girls to old women.
In Darfur, Janjaweed militia kidnapped a 12-year-old girl and
gang-raped her for a week, pulling her legs so far apart that
she was crippled for life. The biggest fear of rape victims in
Darfur, however, is that they will never find a husband. Under
Sudanese law, raped women are prosecuted for adultery or fornication.
Last year, at least two young women in Sudan were sentenced to
death by stoning. As Refugees International observes: "The
government is more likely to take action against those who report
and document rape than those who commit it."
In the wars now savaging the Democratic Republic of Congo, rape
victims also take most of the blame. After being raped, Congolese
women are banished by their husbands and ostracized by their communities.
Often they are genitally mutilated by a gunshot or tossed on a
fire naked.
In cultures where girls and women are married off and chastity
is central to womanhood, all is lost for a woman who loses her
honor. The subsequent stigma often is a heavier burden than the
assault itself. So it should be no surprise that most of these
wounded girls and women keep silent.
During the Balkan wars of the 1990s, women were raped for the
purpose of bearing the enemy's children. According to European
Union estimates, 20,000 women in Bosnia alone were victims of
rape. The women have been largely left to themselves, traumatized
by their experiences and condemned to a life of poverty.
In 1945, an estimated 2 million women were victims of the Red
Army's sexual cruelties - not only German women, but also Jewish
women in hiding, concentration camp survivors, and resistance
fighters. According to the German journalist Ruth Andreas-Friedrich,
the shame felt about "lost honor" created an "atmosphere
of suicide." In April 1945, there were more than 5,000 suicides
in Berlin. Husbands, fathers, and teachers pressured women and
girls to end their own lives after Russian soldiers raped them
because their "honor" was their major concern.
For many girls and women, non-marital sex remains worse than death.
So it is all the more striking - and painful - that for so long
this specific war crime has received little attention. During
World War II, the prohibition on rape by soldiers was well established
in international law, but the post-war Nuremberg and Tokyo war
crimes tribunals prosecuted only a handful of cases.
During the genocide in Rwanda, mass rape was the rule. But sexual
assault was included only accidentally - and secondarily - in
the Rwanda Tribunal's indictments. After a Rwandan woman spontaneously
declared before the tribunal that she and other women had been
raped before the massacre, a female judge followed up and revealed
the enormous scale of sexual violence against women. The Rwanda
Tribunal was the first in history to describe rape as a possible
act of genocide.
In 2001, the International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia
(ICTY) in The Hague condemned the systematic rape of women as
a crime against humanity. In the landmark Foca case, the ICTY
convicted three Bosnian Serbs of rape, torture, and enslavement
of Muslim women in 1992. Girls, some of them just 12 years old,
were gang-raped for weeks.
Yet the perpetrators of wartime mass rape and other forms of sexual
violence usually are not prosecuted. Recently, the Congolese militia
leader Thomas Lubanga became the first prisoner to be tried at
the International Criminal Court in The Hague for the recruitment
of child soldiers. Yet the indictment's failure to mention violence
against women was a "huge shock" to the victims, according
to Congolese human rights organizations. In a petition, they asked
the ICC to investigate mass rapes committed by all parties in
the conflict.
The impunity that is characteristic of these heinous crimes must
stop. Rape and other forms of sexual violence against women should
be openly discussed by governments, members of parliament, militia
leaders, and opinion leaders. Prosecution must become the rule.
The ICC and other tribunals must give a clear signal to the perpetrators.
For women who have been victims of rape, there are no monetary
benefits, memorials or mourning rituals. That must change as well.
There should be a monument to the Unknown Raped Woman at the ICC.
Maybe then its judges would pay closer attention to sexual violence
against women.
From:http://www.worldywca.info/index.php/ywca/women_s_news/articles/the_first_casualties_in_wartime_happen_to_be_women
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