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A new sexual abuse scandal has engulfed the UN
peacekeeping contingent in the Central African Republic after the UN announced
that it has opened an investigation and notified troops from contributing
countries of the child abuse cases in Bangui.
“If the
allegations are substantiated, this would constitute a grave violation of UN
principles and of the code of conduct of peacekeepers,” spokesperson of
the Secretary General, Stephane Dujarric said in New York. “The
member-state will be requested to take swift and appropriate punitive action.”
According
to the UN, countries that have troops in the Central African Republic (CAR)
were notified on Monday and now have ten days to report back to UN on their
action plans in response to the allegation.
RT.com reports:
The latest
case of sexual abuse by peacekeepers in Bangui was recorded by the UN CAR
mission (MINUSCA) last Friday, and involves underage girls. Dujarric did not
specify how many girls were involved or the country of origin of the perpetrators.
But a UN
official told AFP that the recent scandal involves at least two girls, that
claimed to have received goods and food in exchange for sex from an African
peacekeeping contingent.
“Medical
care and assistance is now being provided to the alleged victims,” Dujarric
said. “What we know is that the crimes could go back as far as 2014 and
then most recently occurred this year.”
The new
allegations are the third in a series of UN sexual scandals that surfaced in
recent months from CAR. Previous cases involved allegations of the sexual abuse
of minors that happened in CAR from December 2013 to June 2014, just before an
actual MINUSCA force took over from the African Union mission there.
The
integrity of the global UN peacekeeping contingent of some 125,000 people
deployed across 16 missions in the world was also tainted by sexual misconduct
accusations in Haiti. Just this month, a UN report revealed routine sexual
abuse in exchange for food, jewelry and basic electronics.
To address the issue of the
UN contingent’s sexual misconduct, which is strictly prohibited by the
organization, Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon on Monday appointed a three-member
panel, headed by former Supreme Court justice of Canada Marie Deschamps, to handle
the child sexual abuse allegations in the Central African Republic. Their final
report is due within ten weeks.
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