|
Africa: Peace With Sexual
Violence is Still War
By Stephen Lewis
June 5, 2008 - (Pambazuka News) When my co-Director
of AIDS-Free World, Paula Donovan, visited in November, and observed
that the war being waged against women "may well be the most
savage display of misogyny ever orchestrated in a conflict zone",
she was right. Terrible, unspeakable things have been done to the
women of DR Congo, writes Stephen Lewis.
It isn't enough to stop the shooting when the raping continues apace.
The only worthwhile armistice restores peace for the entire population,
male and female. There can be no satisfaction in claiming a truce
or a peace treaty which is soaked in the carnage of the women of
the land. If all the peacekeepers were women, and the men of a country
were under pervasive sexual assault, do you think the women would
simply observe the carnage?
Three days ago, I returned from Liberia. While in the country, I
met with President Ellen Johnson-Sirleaf, with senior officials
of the Ministry of Health, with the Minister of Gender, with the
leadership of the Clinton Foundation, with the consultant who drafted
the legislation for the special court to try sexual offences, with
the UNICEF Representative and significant numbers of the UNICEF
staff. Unfortunately, I did not have the opportunity to meet with
UNMIL, but the UN Mission in Liberia and its peacekeeping forces
were inevitably a part of every conversation.
The context of my discussions is encapsulated in the words of the
Deputy UN Envoy for the Rule of Law in Liberia when she said, as
recently as May 20th: "We cannot expect the future leaders
of Liberia, the doctors, nurses, and engineers of Liberia to be
brought up amongst men who are rapists and women who are angry,
degraded, frightened, depressed, embarrassed and confused."
She was speaking about the contagion of sexual violence that currently
engulfs the country and causes such intense concern. The statistics
are horrifying: a recent study by UNICEF indicated that more than
fifty per cent of all reported rapes are brutal assaults on young
girls between the ages of ten and fourteen. The gender advisor in
UNICEF felt that the percentage was probably on the rise, and it's
feared that increases in the HIV rates among female youth will not
be far behind. The Minister of Gender showed me figures for March,
2008, indicating that the majority of reported rapes in that month
were committed against girls under the age of twelve, some under
the age of five, and she narrated stories of gang rape so insensate
and so depraved that it reminded me of exhibits in a Holocaust museum.
A further survey, of all fifteen counties in the country, found
that girls and boys were united in their conviction that young girls
were the most endangered group in Liberia, and incredibly enough,
that there was no place and no time of day or night where adolescent
girls could be considered safe.
Predictably, President Johnson-Sirleaf is thunderstruck by the force
of the sexual violence. In a very real sense she is staking the
integrity of her tenure on her ability to confront and subdue the
war on women.
But how did it come to this? UNMIL has been in the country since
2003 ... it has a large contingent of women peacekeepers: it has
an Office of the Gender Advisor and of the Advisor on HIV/AIDS;
it has gender mainstreaming built into the mandate; both the UN
Envoy and the Deputy UN Envoy are women; and the resolution of 2003
which constituted UNMIL incorporated Security Council Resolution
1325 which --- you will agree --- was supposed to guarantee the
involvement of women in the peace-keeping processes, but more important,
guarantee women protection and security from gender-based violence
and violations of human rights.
Clearly all that hasn't worked in Liberia, where things for women
and girls are getting worse. Where did we go wrong?
My own view, and the view of the organization to which I belong
--- AIDS-Free World --- is that peacekeepers and force commanders
alike have to take sexual violence much more seriously. It is simply
untenable to argue that the responsibility to keep the warring parties
at bay transcends every other human imperative. It doesn't. You
may succeed in manufacturing a semblance of peace, but for the women
of the country, the conflict continues in the most painful and eviscerating
of ways.
In the case of Liberia, it isn't a matter of a contentious mandate:
as I said, Resolution 1325 is built into the obligations of peacekeeping.
Anyone would argue that when a peacekeeper in the field knows of
acts of sexual violence having been committed, or has reason to
believe that acts of sexual violence have been or will be committed,
then he or she has the obligation to intervene or, to use the language
of the day, the 'responsibility to protect'.
But let me be even clearer about this. Peacekeepers aren't mere
passive observers of the human family. Peacekeepers move into a
country; they learn its social architecture; they watch the roiling
political terrain on a day-to-day basis. They come to know the foibles,
to know the extremes, to know the anomalies. More often than not,
they can tell when trouble is brewing. They can intuit when men
might hurtle out of control. They have the pulse of the culture.
When it unravels, they're there to bear witness. I'm saying that
when patterns of sexual violence emerge, peacekeepers are rarely
surprised. In some cases, they alone have anticipated the atrocities
in the offing. And with that knowledge comes obligation. With that
insight comes responsibility. It isn't enough to stop the shooting
when the raping continues apace. The only worthwhile armistice restores
peace for the entire population, male and female. There can be no
satisfaction in claiming a truce or a peace treaty which is soaked
in the carnage of the women of the land.
Conventional wisdom says that it is the Security Council's job to
set policy, and the peacekeepers' job to follow it. But that's too
easy. The Department of Peacekeeping Operations, and its military
contingents in-country, should be hollering from the rooftops whenever
they feel that their role is somehow constrained. If you need more
troops, ask for them. If you need more training, ask for it. If
you require a larger contingent of police officers, insist on it.
If, in the field, you see sexual mayhem in place, then after intervening,
take the names of individual soldiers and witnesses and seek investigation
and indictments from the International Criminal Court. If the UN's
Member States won't comply, then call a press conference and tell
the world that women are being sacrificed on the altar of myopic
parsimony, or perhaps more accurately, on the altar of Pavlovian
sexism.
There is nothing facetious in this; I'm absolutely serious. The
United Nations cannot allow the terrible assault on women to continue,
while crouching behind the ambiguity of mandate. That, I remind
you, is what the Department of Peacekeeping Operations did between
January and April of 1994, in the perverse struggle with UN Force
Commander General Romeo Dallaire over "rules of engagement".
And there followed the deaths of eight hundred thousand Rwandans
and the start of the war in the Congo.
In the DR Congo, it is now estimated that 5.4 million people have
died since the end of the Rwandan genocide. That conflict was finally
supposed to have been resolved by a peace engagement of January
last. To some extent, the battles stopped. But as always, just as
in Liberia, the war never ends for women.
In the case of DR Congo, the role of peacekeepers could not be clearer.
The words of the Security Council resolution of December 21st, 2007,
extending the mandate of the UN Mission in the Congo, MONUC, were
absolutely unequivocal: Paragraph 18 "Requests MONUC, in view
of the scale and severity of sexual violence committed especially
by armed elements in the Democratic Republic of the Congo, to undertake
a thorough review of its efforts to prevent and respond to sexual
violence, and to pursue a mission-wide strategy, in close cooperation
with the United Nations Country Team and other partners, to strengthen
prevention, protection, and response to sexual violence, including
through training of Congolese security forces in accordance with
its mandate, and to regularly report, including in a separate annex
if necessary, on actions taken in this regard, including factual
data and trend analyses of the problem ...".
That sounds very much to me as though the Security Council knew
full well that things were off the rails where sexual violence was
concerned, and this was an explicit instruction to MONUC to get
its act together. In that regard, it's significant that the Security
Council went even further: the final clause of the resolution requires
the Secretary-General himself to report on the issues covered in
Paragraph 18.
To be sure, I can't pretend to know exactly what lay in the minds
of the Security Council members, but these things I do know: Dr.
Denis Mukwege, who heads the Panzi Hospital for survivors of rape
and sexual violence in the Eastern city of Bukavu, told me when
we met in New Orleans three weeks ago, that although the steady
flow of raped women has slowed somewhat since the January accord,
it continues in shocking numbers; the UNICEF staff in the field
agree that things are still in the realm of nightmare for women,
who live lives haunted by the fear of being violated, tortured,
mutilated, infected with HIV. And who expected anything different,
when the countless women who have suffered such demonic sexual violence
were not sitting at the peace table last January, and were not signatories
to the agreement ... a direct violation of Resolution 1325? Who
can claim to be surprised by reports from Congolese NGOs on the
ground, who say that in the country's so-called peacekeeping period,
women are still too frightened to leave their homes?
When Under Secretary-General John Holmes said the Congo was the
worst place in the world for women, he was right. When Eve Ensler,
the noted author of the Vagina Monologues wrote of the Congo that
she had just 'returned from hell', she was right. When my co-Director
of AIDS-Free World, Paula Donovan, visited in November, and observed
that the war being waged against women "may well be the most
savage display of misogyny ever orchestrated in a conflict zone",
she was right.
Terrible, unspeakable things have been done to the women of DR Congo.
I want simply to argue that MONUC has it within its mandate to end
the reign of terror. If it so chooses, MONUC can also have it within
its power to end the reign of terror. Whatever MONUC feels it lacks
to protect the women of the Congo --- numbers, police, equipment,
training, time, leadership, resources --- let them demand it. And
if those demands aren't met, let them tell the world that madness
is at work and it knows no end.
Normally, one would turn to the Secretary-General of the United
Nations for help in this difficult situation. But how can we have
trust?
The Secretary-General gets commendably engaged when it comes to
Burma or the price of food, but where is the same sense of throbbing
agitation when it comes to sexual violence? This is a Secretary-General
who should be insisting on the invocation of the "Responsibility
to Protect" in the Congo, but fails to do so. The defense and
protection of the rights of women do not come instinctively to him.
This is, after all, a Secretary-General who granted immunity to
the former High Commissioner for Refugees, when a claim of sexual
harassment against him reached a New York court. I remember that
when the Secretary-General was first appointed, he told a group
of NGOs that his learning curve on gender was virtually vertical.
A year and a half later, the upward climb appears to have stalled
at the bottom of the graph.
No, if we are to turn things around, with or without the help of
the Secretary-General, the peacekeepers must lie at the heart of
the transformation. How excellent that would be. Resolution 1325
would finally be liberated from the dustbins of the Security Council,
and women, without fear, could take hold of their collective destiny.
You can be sure there would be no vacillation.
If all the peacekeepers were women, and the men of a country were
under pervasive sexual assault, do you think the women would simply
observe the carnage? Not a chance. And they wouldn't need a Security
Council Resolution to tell them what to do.
From:http://www.pambazuka.org/en/category/features/48550
|