[CS-FSLUG] Sex scandal in Congo threatens to engulf UN's peacekeepers

Fred A. Miller fmiller at lightlink.com
Mon Dec 27 09:20:36 CST 2004


I have NO use for the UN, and this only increases my disgust for what has been 
shown to be a very dishonest organization........at best.

Fred
________________

World News

http://www.timesonline.co.uk/article/0,,3-1413501_1,00.html

December 23, 2004

Sex scandal in Congo threatens to engulf UN's peacekeepers 
By Jonathan Clayton and James Bone 

They should be rebuilding the country, but foreign workers face serious
accusations

HOME-MADE pornographic videos shot by a United Nations logistics expert in the
Democratic Republic of Congo have sparked a sex scandal that threatens to 
become
the UN's Abu Ghraib.

The expert was a Frenchman who worked at Goma airport as part of the UN's $700
million-a-year effort to rebuild the war-shattered country. When police raided
his home they discovered that he had turned his bedroom into a studio for
videotaping and photographing sex sessions with young girls.

The bed was surrounded by large mirrors on three sides, according to a senior
Congolese police officer. On the fourth side was a camera that he could 
operate
from the bed with a remote control.

When the police arrived the man was allegedly about to rape a
12-year-old girl sent to him in a sting operation. Three home-made porn videos
and more than 50 photographs were found.

The case has highlighted the apparently rampant sexual exploitation of 
Congolese
girls and women by the UN's 11,000 peacekeepers and 1,000 civilians at a time
when the UN is facing many problems, including the Iraqi "oil-for-food" 
scandal
and accusations of sexual harassment by senior UN staff in Geneva and New 
York.

The prospect of the pornographic videos and photographs - now on sale in Congo 
-
becoming public worries senior UN officials, who fear a UN version of the
scandal at the American-run Abu Ghraib jail in Iraq. "It would be a pretty big
problem for the UN if these pictures come out," one senior official said.

Investigations have already turned up 150 allegations of sexual misconduct by
peacekeepers and UN staff despite the UN's official policy of 
"zero-tolerance".
One found 68 allegations of misconduct in the town of Bunia alone.

UN insiders told The Times that two Russian pilots based in Mbandaka paid 
young
girls with jars of mayonnaise and jam to have sex with them.

They filmed the sessions and sent the tapes to Russia. But the men were tipped
off and left the area before UN investigators arrived.

The Moroccan peacekeeping contingent based in Kisangani - a town on the Congo
River with no road links to the outside world - had one of the worst
reputations. A soldier accused of rape was apparently hidden in the barracks 
for
a year.

In July 2002 the rebel commander Major-General Jean Pierre Ondekane, who
subsequently became Minister of Defence in a postwar transitional government,
told a top UN official that all that Monuc (the United Nations Mission in the
Democratic Republic of Congo) would be remembered for in Kisangani was "for
running after little girls".

An international organisation examining the sex trade between Monuc and local
women found that in March there were 82 women and girls who had been made
pregnant by Moroccan men and 59 more by Uruguayan men.

According to UN insiders, at least two UN officials - a Ukrainian and a 
Canadian
- have had to leave the country after getting local women pregnant.

Jordan's Prince Zeid Raad Al Hussein, a special adviser to the UN
Secretary-General, who led one investigative team, said in a confidential 
report
obtained by The Times: "The situation appears to be one of 'zero-compliance 
with
zero- tolerance' throughout the mission."

Sexual exploitation and abuse mostly involves the exchange of sex for money 
(on
average between $1 - 52p - and $3), for food - for immediate consumption or to
barter - or for jobs, especially affecting daily workers, the prince's report
said.

In addition, victims spoke of incidents of rape, as well as "rape disguised as
prostitution" where a girl was raped and then given money or food afterwards 
to
give the appearance of a transaction having taken place.

Three civilian UN staff have already been suspended.

A man who worked for the UN's investigative arm in Kinshasa has resigned after
being accused of consorting with a prostitute.

The Frenchman with the homemade pornography accused of paedophilia was sent 
back
to France in October and is in jail facing charges of sexually assaulting a
minor.

"The fact that these things happened is a blot on us. It's awful,"
Jean-Marie Guehenno, the UN's under-secretary-general for peacekeeping, said.

"What is important is to get to the bottom of it and fight it and make sure 
that
people who do that pay for what they have done."

The UN has now plastered its code of conduct on UN premises in Congo.
The code forbids sex with prostitutes or women under the age of 18 - even 
though
the Congolese age of consent is 14.

But the UN continues to hand out free condoms to peacekeepers because of the
fear of Aids.

A second internal UN report, also obtained by The Times, detailed the extent 
of
prostitution by "street girls" and "girlfriends" in Kisangani.

"One strategy is to find another UN staffer with a 'girl friend' and ask the
girl if she knows a friend. She will usually be only too happy to comply and a
more or less suitable candidate will be dispatched to the staff member's 
house,"
the report said.

Mireille Byongo, 20, a prostitute from Goma, said that she had had no problem
gaining admission to the town's UN barracks.

"The guys on duty at the entrance know why we have come," she said. She said 
she
had once gone to the tent of her Moroccan "boyfriend" and found him with a 
young
girl aged "anything from 10 to 12". Disgusted, she left.

"Never forget this is Heart of Darkness country. People do things here just
because they can," one female UN employee said, in a reference to Joseph
Conrad's novel about the abuses of the former Belgian Congo.

THE MISSION

Military strength: 11,570 uniformed personnel, including 10,848 troops,
567 military observers

Civilian staff: 155 civilian police supported by 707 international civilian
personnel and 1,135 local civilian staff

Contributing countries: 47 including Uruguay (1,800 troops), Pakistan (1,700),
South Africa (1,400) and India (1,300)

Fatalities: 33 military personnel, eight observers, two foreign civilians and
one local civilian

Approved budget: $746.10 million (£390 million), July 1, 2004-June 30,
2005

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"As Internet technology itself vaults into new areas, so too does the
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