Thursday May 15, 2008
U.N. opens inquiry into peacekeeper sex abuse charges
By Joe Bavier
KINSHASA (Reuters) - The United Nations is investigating allegations that its peacekeepers in eastern Democratic Republic of Congo committed sexual abuses, which aid workers said involved paying children for sex.
![]() |
A U.N. peacekeeper sits on the top of his armoured vehicle in the outskirts of Aveba, about 65 km southwest of Bunia, the main town in Democratic Republic of Congo's eastern Ituri district in this United Nations Mission in the Democratic Republic of Congo (MONUC) handout February 28, 2006. (REUTERS/MONUC/Handout) |
The spokesman for the U.N. Mission in Congo (MONUC), Kemal Saiki, said on Wednesday that an investigation had been launched by the U.N. Office of Internal Oversight Services (OIOS) but declined to give further details.
Aid workers, who asked not to be identified, said the inquiry was focusing on Indian U.N. peacekeepers accused of paying for sex with underage girls in Congo's violence-torn east.
"There are allegations and independent services are working on them," Saiki said.
He said the alleged incidents took place in North Kivu province, where U.N. troops have been policing a shaky ceasefire between rival rebel and militia factions and government troops.
The allegations have surfaced at a time when the U.N. mission is under heavy scrutiny after a recent report by Human Rights Watch accused it of covering up allegations of Pakistani and Indian troops' involvement in alleged arms and gold smuggling in eastern Congo.
MONUC Chief Alan Doss has strongly rejected the allegations and warned they could hamper peacekeeping operations in Congo and worldwide by prompting some countries to withdraw their troops.
The United Nations has consistently said OIOS inquiries have failed to turn up evidence of widespread abuse, although they have found evidence of less serious misdemeanours by individuals which has been turned over to Indian and Pakistani authorities.
The vast majority of MONUC's nearly 18,000-strong force is based in Congo's east, which has remained a violent patchwork of rebel fiefdoms and militia-controlled areas despite the official end of a 1998-2003 war.
Since its deployment in 2000, the peacekeeping force has been embroiled in a number of sex and smuggling scandals.
More than 100 U.N. peacekeepers and personnel have been killed attempting to bring peace to the vast, mineral-rich central African nation.
Experts estimate Congo's 1998-2003 war and the humanitarian catastrophe it spawned have killed 5.4 million people, mostly from hunger and disease linked to the violence. That would make it the deadliest conflict since World War Two.
Copyright © 2008 Reuters
News Poll
- Stir over girly calendar
- I’m not married yet, says Zizie
- Bus driver finds wife and son dead at home
- HK star Gigi changes name to ‘add a son’
- Anguish over bilingualism
- Priest attacked and stripped after asking for a raise
- Reject racism, says Anwar
- Sexual promiscuity and influx of workers are major factors
- Koh: Govt is committed
- Can one set the terms for quitting?
- Anguish over bilingualism
- Two-phase process for varsity seat applications
- Stir over girly calendar
- Making safety and security our priority
- Homestay programme to include Chinese new villages
- Can one set the terms for quitting?
- PKR youth leaders remanded for three days
- Priest attacked and stripped after asking for a raise
- New airport for Mukah
- Five years after tsunami, development makes Aceh look better than ever



