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As one of its efforts to
address allegations of sexual misconduct by UN keepers worldwide, the
organization, has quietly begun running DNA tests to resolve paternity claims
by victims who are left raising ‘UN babies,’ according to AP.
Some
of the UN’s 125,000 peacekeeping force spanning over 16 locations across the
world, have engaged in sexual relations with local populations, or have even
been accused of committing sexual crimes. Such acts have result in claims that
a child was conceived from a member of the UN force, including non-military
staff.
Of
the dozen paternity claims received last year, four were associated with
alleged sexual abuse of a minor, the Associated Press reports. When asked whom
the UN personnel may legally have sex with during their deployment, a UN
official told the agency “no one,” except each other. Otherwise
intercourse could lead to an investigation, the official added.
Back
in 2005, a special report by Zeid Raad al-Hussein, now the UN’s human rights
chief, urged the organization to conduct DNA tests, should such suspicions
arise.
“Assembly
should authorize the Secretary-General to require DNA and other tests to
establish paternity in appropriate cases so as to ensure that peacekeeping
personnel can be obligated to provide child support to so-called peacekeeper
babies that they father and abandon,” the report stated.
Officer?
whose pikin is she? Thony BelizaireAFP-Getty Images
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A
decade later, the UN is quietly following up on the advice, and last year
started offering a DNA collection protocol and testing kits. A UN cable
obtained this month by AP, shows that in January 2014, the peacekeeping office
offered its missions “guidance on assistance in instances of paternity
claims involving current or former members of peacekeeping missions in terms of
DNA testing.”
So
far the measure is voluntary. It is up to the discretion of the
troop-contributing states to decide how to address paternity claims brought
against their troops by alleged victims. But the “most foolproof
method,” according to a leaked UN-commissioned report, would be
a “DNA data bank for all troops” involved in peacekeeping operations.
According
to a UN official, a member state with a peacekeeping contingent is asked if
they can conduct DNA testing. If not, the UN is offering to do it. However, as
the UN lacks authority to conduct criminal investigations, it has no way to
force a country to carryout the procedures. Under the model status-of-forces agreement,
military members are subject to the criminal authority of the
troop-contributing country concerned.
The
question however arises what to do if the paternity test is positive, which can
sometimes lead to possible criminal proceedings. “Almost half” of the
paternity claims reported since January 2010 – 14 out of 29 – were made by
minors who claimed they were raped, according to AP.
The
question of compensation for the victims still remains. It is unclear how this
issue could be solved, but a decade ago, the report suggested to take money out
of peacekeeper's salary.
“If
paternity were established, the United Nations could, with a small change in
its rules, deduct from the salary of that staff member, or from his final
emoluments... the equivalent of one year’s salary of a local employee in the
mission area,” Zeid proposed in the report.
This
would at least provide some child support to the mother, the report argued.
According
to Ban Ki-moon’s annual report on combating sexual abuse cases, the
number of new allegations of sexual exploitation totaled 79 in 2014, compared
with 96 in 2013.
Of
the allegations recorded in 2014, 38 were the result of three peacekeeping
missions in the Democratic Republic of Congo, South Sudan and Haiti. The
remaining 13 allegations were received from Liberia, Mali, Afghanistan, Cyprus,
Lebanon and the Ivory Coast. Sexual abuse of minors constituted 25 percent of
the cases.
There
were 12 paternity claims in total, with seven originating in Mali and five from
the Democratic Republic of Congo.
The annual report says the
UN is addressing the paternity tests issue by “systematically sharing a
DNA collection protocol with concerned member States” and offering to
assist gathering DNA samples from mothers and children, to compare them against
DNA samples from their alleged fathers.
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