French peacekeeping troops were supposed to be protecting children at a center for internally displaced people at M’Poko Airport in CAR’s capital Bangui, when the abuse reportedly took place between December 2013 and June 2014. It was at a time when the UN’s mission at the country, MINUSCA, was in the process of being set up.
An internal investigation was ordered by the UN office of the high commissioner for human rights (UNHCR), after reports on the ground of sexual abuse of children displaced by the conflict.
A member of staff from the high commissioner of human rights and a specialist from UNICEF interviewed the children between May and June last year. Some of the boys were able to give good descriptions of individual soldiers who abused them.
the confidential UN report entitled Sexual
Abuse on Children by International Armed Forces, French authorities traveled to
Bangui to investigate the allegations.
A French judicial source said that the
prosecutor’s office had received the UN report in July 2014 and that a
preliminary investigation had been launched.
“A preliminary investigation has been opened by
the Paris prosecutor since July 21, 2014. The investigation is ongoing,” he
said, as quoted by Reuters.
The UN also confirmed Monday that it had given
an unredacted report to the French authorities on the alleged abuse of children
by French soldiers in CAR.
“The unedited version was, by a staff member's
own admission, provided unofficially by that staff member to the French
authorities in late July, prior to even providing it to the Office of the High
Commissioner for Human Rights' (OHCHR) senior management,” the spokesman for
the UN Secretary-General said in a statement.
The regular sex abuse by peacekeeping personnel
uncovered here and the United Nations’ appalling disregard for victims are
stomach-turning, but the awful truth is that this isn’t uncommon. The UN’s
instinctive response to sexual violence in its ranks – ignore, deny, cover up,
dissemble – must be subjected to a truly independent commission of inquiry with
total access, top to bottom, and full subpoena power,” she said.
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Last month, Mr Kompass was accused of leaking a
confidential UN report and breaching protocols.
Kompass was dismissed last week as director of
field operations and is now under investigation by the UN office for internal
oversight service (OIOS). One senior UN official even said that “it was his
[Kompass’s] duty to know and comply” with UN protocols on confidential documents.
Bea Edwards from the US based Government
Accountability Project, a whistleblower protection and advocacy organization,
blasted the UN for what is little more than witch-hunt against someone who
sought to protect children.
“We have represented many whistleblowers in the
UN system over the years and in general the more serious the disclosure they
make the more ferocious the retaliation. Despite the official rhetoric, there
is very little commitment at the top of the organization to protect
whistleblowers and a strong tendency to politicize every issue no matter how
urgent.”
France’s Operation Sangaris in CAR began in
December 2013. It is now being wound down as Paris hands over security to an
8,500-strong UN peacekeeping force deployed to contain the deadly conflict.
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