Close X
Monday, November 25, 2024
ADVT 
National

Canadians Join Campaigners Calling For End To UN Peacekeeper Sex Abuse

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 13 May, 2015 11:04 PM
    OTTAWA — An international coalition that includes the former Canadian UN ambassador Stephen Lewis and retired general and senator Romeo Dallaire launched a campaign Wednesday to end sexual abuse by UN peacekeepers and international employees.
     
    The coalition, which calls itself Code Blue, wants UN Secretary Ban Ki-moon to lift the diplomatic immunity that protects UN employees from being held to account when abuse complaints arise.
     
    The campaign has added relevance because of the scandal that erupted last month in Central African Republic with child sex abuse allegations against French soldiers involving boys, some as young as age nine.
     
    Lewis said Ban's inaction makes a mockery of his annual pledge of zero tolerance towards abuse.
     
    "Time and time again, on an annual basis, the secretary general reiterates the goal of zero tolerance, and time and time again, on an annual basis, the evidence that the secretary general himself presents makes a mockery of the phrase."
     
    Lewis said sexual violence is more prevalent among the non-military international players — civil servants, police, experts and staff from UN agencies — but they are largely protected by a 1946 UN convention on immunity.
     
    During a news conference Wednesday in New York, blocks from UN headquarters, he dared Ban to waive it more frequently.
     
    "The ultimate decisions on the exercise of immunity in each and every instance rests in the hands of one man: the secretary general of the United Nations," said Lewis.
     
    The one-time Ontario NDP leader served as Brian Mulroney's UN ambassador in the 1980s and campaigned with the Progressive Conservative prime minister to help end South Africa's racist apartheid regime. He has remained active in the UN and international affairs since then.
     
    Paula Donovan, a campaign organizer, said she is hoping for the support of the Canadian government and its people because of the country's peacekeeping tradition.
     
    "Governments like Canada have a very serious vested interest in peacekeeping and keeping it as noble as it was intended when you guys invented it."
     
    With the backing of U.S. President Dwight Eisenhower, former external affairs minister Lester Pearson proposed the first UN peacekeeping mission in 1956 to help defuse the Suez Crisis.
     
    Pearson received the Nobel Peace Prize in 1957, but in recent decades Canada's contribution to UN peacekeeping has dwindled. UN figures show that 22 Canadian troops are deployed on such missions, far behind the top three countries — Bangladesh at 9,300 and India and Pakistan at about 8,100 each.
     
    Donovan said despite its low numbers, Canada continues to contribute technical expertise and money to UN peacekeeping, so it is engaged.
     
    "The issue of sexual abuse and exploitation of children, those are all high on the Canadian agenda, so I can only hope and imagine that the Canadian government and certainly the people of Canada will embrace this campaign."
     
    Nineteen years ago, Mozambique humanitarian advocate Graca Machel wrote the leading report on the issue, which documented a significant rise in child prostitution in six of 12 countries that had seen the deployment of UN peacekeepers.
     
    "The evidence is that things have not changed, have not improved, apparently they have gotten even worse. You are all familiar with the recent events in Central African Republic," said Machel, who is also Nelson Mandela's widow.
     
    Machel said all countries in the United Nations are responsible for the international peacekeeping missions that are deployed under its banner.
     
    Therefore, she said, every country in the world is responsible for the shattered lives of women and young people that some UN peacekeepers are leaving in their wake.
     
    "This is not about something which belongs to somebody else — it belongs to us," said Machel. "Just think about that, and take this as your cause."
     
    Dallaire, who commanded the ill-fated UN peacekeeping mission to Rwanda during its 1994 genocide, said nothing can undermine the credibility or neutrality of a mission more than when the protectors of traumatized civilians become their abusers.
     
    "There is no such thing in a conflict zone, or a post-conflict zone, as consenting adults," said Dallaire. "No fraternization, and no consenting adults means a barrier that cannot be crossed by those who are deployed."

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Crown, Defence Lawyer Haggle Over Evidence At Duffy Trial

    Crown, Defence Lawyer Haggle Over Evidence At Duffy Trial
    OTTAWA — Mike Duffy's trial is taking a short detour as the Crown and defence haggle over a piece of evidence.

    Crown, Defence Lawyer Haggle Over Evidence At Duffy Trial

    Doing The Right Thing Comes At A Cost Harper Tells WW2 Vets At Ve Day Service

    Doing The Right Thing Comes At A Cost Harper Tells WW2 Vets At Ve Day Service
    HOLTEN, Netherlands — Prime Minister Stephen Harper paid tribute to Canada's war dead at a service in the Netherlands this morning.

    Doing The Right Thing Comes At A Cost Harper Tells WW2 Vets At Ve Day Service

    Ottawa To Pay Nunavut More Than $250 Million In Land Claim Lawsuit Settlement

    Ottawa To Pay Nunavut More Than $250 Million In Land Claim Lawsuit Settlement
    IQALUIT, Nunavut — Ottawa will pay Nunavut $256 million as part of a settlement of a longstanding lawsuit. Most of that money will be used to fund training for Inuit to enter the territory's civil service.

    Ottawa To Pay Nunavut More Than $250 Million In Land Claim Lawsuit Settlement

    Voters Go To The Polls On P.E.I., Liberals Seeking Third Straight Majority

    Voters Go To The Polls On P.E.I., Liberals Seeking Third Straight Majority
    CHARLOTTETOWN — Voters on Prince Edward Island will determine the fate today of a premier who has been on the job for just over two months.

    Voters Go To The Polls On P.E.I., Liberals Seeking Third Straight Majority

    Missing Family Found After Search In Wilderness North Of Kamloops

    Missing Family Found After Search In Wilderness North Of Kamloops
    KAMLOOPS, B.C. — A family of four has been found after a backcountry search north of Kamloops, B.C. Crews were scouring the rural McLure area by both ground and air on Monday morning.

    Missing Family Found After Search In Wilderness North Of Kamloops

    Bollywood Goes Gaga Over Indo-Canadian NBA Star Sim Bhullar Who Made History

    Bollywood Goes Gaga Over Indo-Canadian NBA Star Sim Bhullar Who Made History
    As said by Priyanka, with a towering personality Sim Bhullar stands tall, while she and Ranveer look tiny in front of him. Priyanka even pulled out a chair and tried to match height with him.

    Bollywood Goes Gaga Over Indo-Canadian NBA Star Sim Bhullar Who Made History