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UN
Emergency Relief Coordinator denounces sexual violence
United Nations
Department of Public Information (DPI)
December 01, 2006
http://www.reliefweb.int/rw/rwb.nsf/db900SID/EGUA-6W3TTM?OpenDocument&RSS20=18-P
Jan Egeland,
Under-Secretary-General for Humanitarian Affairs and Emergency Relief
Coordinator, today denounced the use of rape as a weapon of war
and called upon the authorities in one of the most affected countries,
the Democratic Republic of the Congo, to ensure that rape victims
- including those traumatized by fistula - no longer find themselves
ostracized in their communities, as is now so often the case.
Joining Mr.
Egeland at a press conference at United Nations Headquarters on
World AIDS Day was Dr. Denis Mukwege, Director of the Panzi Hospital
in Bukavu, in the East of the Democratic Republic of the Congo,
which has treated 7,500 victims of sexual violence, aged 6 to over
60, and carried out 4,100 operations, including 1,225 operations
to correct rape-induced obstetric fistula.
Mr. Egeland
drew a link between sexual violence, particularly in conflict zones,
and the spread of HIV/AIDS, pointing out that 25 million people
in sub-Saharan Africa were living with AIDS. "By the end of
2010, we estimate that there will be more than 15 million children
orphaned by HIV in Africa," he added. Recalling his visit earlier
this year to the Panzi Hospital, he noted that "dozens"
of its patients were less than 12 years old - victims of sexual
violence at the hands of more than 20 armed groups in the South
Kivu district.
Many of the
patients he had met had been victims of a veritable "tsunami"
of acts of gang rape resulting in fistula - the outcome of the forced
insertion of foreign objects into a victim’s vagina, resulting in
the tearing of the delicate tissue separating the birth canal from
the bowel or bladder, rending her physically incontinent and psychologically
scarred.
"Rape is
not a consequence of war, it is the result of war; it is a weapon
that is used to wage war," said Dr. Mukwege, adding that it
was not enough to go to the aid of victims and their families: "Communities
need to be educated, too… Rather than stigmatize the victim, one
must stigmatize the rapist."
Speaking a day
after Secretary-General Kofi Annan launched the Humanitarian Appeal
2007, Mr. Egeland said that conflict-related sexual violence in
general, and fistula in particular, had grown into a global problem,
though "it is probably worse in numbers now in eastern Congo
than anywhere else in the world". It was to be seen today in
Darfur, western Sudan, as it had been seen in other conflict zones,
such as Bosnia and Herzegovina where a European Community study
found that 20,000 Muslim women had been raped during the country’s
1992-1995 war.
Mr. Egeland
denounced the "deniability" of such violence, saying it
was by no means limited to any particular culture. Indeed, it was
happening "among Christians, Muslims, Hindus, Buddhists all
over the world". In the Democratic Republic of the Congo, it
was like a "cancer" that had "infected the minds
of young men with guns".
Dr. Mukwege
agreed, saying: "It is a new technique of war that we are seeing.
It is a sickness of our century… a tactic that aims to destroy through
the spread of HIV and mutilation." It not only ruined lives
of victims, but also their families - and, in turn, whole communities.
Mr. Egeland
recalled a meeting with President Joseph Kabila of the Democratic
Republic of the Congo at which Mr. Kabila vowed that, if elected,
he would go to the Panzi Hospital to launch a national campaign
to curb sexual violence, and that any Government official or soldier
who had been involved in such crimes would be fired. Since Mr. Kabila
won the election, "I’ve written to him, reminding him of his
promise - and I will hold him to his promise." The Under-Secretary
also appealed for additional funding contributions for the Panzi
Hospital, saying that, while it had the money to carry out operations,
more was needed to help rape victims rejoin their families and reintegrate
into their communities.
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