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Child abuse by aid workers, peacekeepers
rife-study
By David Clarke
May 27, 2008 (AlertNet) - Sexual abuse of children
by aid workers and peacekeepers is rife and efforts to protect young
people are inadequate, said a report published on Tuesday.
The study by charity Save the Children UK said there were significant
levels of abuse in emergencies, much of it unreported and unless
the silence ended, attempts to stamp out exploitation would "remain
fundamentally flawed".
Accusations of sexual abuse by U.N. peacekeepers and aid workers
around the world have increased in recent years and the United Nations
is investigating claims against its soldiers in hotspots such as
Haiti, Liberia, Ivory Coast and the Democratic Republic of Congo.
The report said while the U.N. and some non-governmental organisations
were stepping up efforts to address the problem, a global watchdog
should be established this year to monitor attempts to tackle abuse
and champion effective responses.
Save the Children based its findings on visits last year to Haiti,
Southern Sudan and Ivory Coast. It held 38 focus group discussions
with 250 children and 90 adults, followed up by in-depth interviews
with some and desk-based research.
The study found a huge range of exploitation and abuse: children
trading sex for food, forced sex, verbal sexual abuse, child prostitution,
child pornography, sexual slavery, sexual assault and child trafficking.
The focus groups identified children as young as six as having been
abused, although most were aged 14 to 15.
U.N. peacekeepers were identified as the most likely perpetrators
by 20 of the 38 groups, although a total of 23 humanitarian, peacekeeping
and security organisations were associated with sexual abuse in
the three countries.
"All humanitarian and peacekeeping agencies working in emergency
situations, including Save the Children UK, must own up to the fact
that they are vulnerable to this problem and tackle it head on,"
said Jasmine Whitbread, chief executive of Save the Children UK.
YOUNG GIRLS
More than half of the participants in the study identified incidents
of sexual touching and forced sex. Of these, 18 and 23 percent respectively
recalled 10 or more such incidents.
"They especially ask us for girls of our age. Often it will
be between eight and 10 men who will share two or three girls. When
I suggest an older girl, they say that they want a young girl,"
a 14-year-old boy who works at a peacekeeping camp in Ivory Coast
told the Save the Children research team.
And the report said official U.N. statistics appeared to underestimate
the scale of abuse, probably because so much of the exploitation
was not reported by victims.
"Clearly there is a significant disparity between the low levels
of abuse cited in these statistics and the high levels suggested
in field investigations and other evidence," it said.
Save the Children said there were many reasons why abuse was not
reported: fear of losing material assistance, threat of retribution,
stigmatisation, negative economic impact, lack of legal services,
resignation to abuse, lack of information about how to report abuse
and, crucially, lack of faith in a response.
Anecdotal evidence from all 38 focus groups suggested there was
an endemic failure to respond to reports of abuse.
"Many U.N. agencies and NGOs working here feel they cannot
be touched by anyone," said an aid worker in Ivory Coast.
From:http://www.alertnet.org/thenews/newsdesk/121188083384.htm
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