International charity reports widespread sexual abuse of children by U.N. troops and aid staff!
LONDON, England - May 27, 2008 - An
international watchdog must be set up urgently to investigate widespread cases
of child sex abuse by aid workers and peacekeepers, a British charity said
today.
Save the Children demanded action
after its research found that starving and desperate youngsters as young as six
were being coerced to sell sex for food, money, soap and even mobile phones in
war zones and disaster areas.
Hundreds of young people from Ivory
Coast, Southern Sudan and Haiti were involved in the research behind the
conclusions.
One of them was 'Elizabeth', who
was 12-years-old when she was snatched from the roadside early one morning last
June and dragged into the bush by 10 UN peacekeepers who raped her one by one.
Village elders who tried to report
the attack to senior officers in the Ivory Coast claimed their allegations were
ignored. Since the attack 'Elizabeth' says she has dropped out of school and
lost interest in life.
Jasmine Whitbread, chief executive
of Save the Children UK, said, “This research exposes the despicable actions of
a small number of perpetrators who are sexually abusing some of the most
vulnerable children in the world, the very children they are meant to protect.
It is hard to imagine a more grotesque abuse of authority or flagrant violation
of children’s rights."
The report said that all
organizations, including Save the Children, had their share of abusers involved
in “some of the most despicable abuse against some of the world’s most
vulnerable children”.
Charities and peacekeeping bodies
should face up to the fact that the scale of abuse was “significant” and that
victims were being let down by “endemic failures” in responding to reported
incidents, it concluded.
Better reporting mechanisms should
be introduced, it said, and efforts made to strengthen child protection systems
across the globe.
“In recent years, some important
commitments have been made by the United Nations, the wider international
community and by humanitarian and aid agencies to act on this problem,"
said Ms. Whitbread.
“But welcome as these are, in most cases statements of
principle and good intent have yet to be converted into really decisive and
concerted international action.