FRI 19 - 4 - 2024
 
Date: Jun 11, 2011
Source: The Daily Star
Rape used as weapon of war in Libya and elsewhere: U.N.

By Stephanie Nebehay

Reuters


GENEVA: Rape is still being used as a brutal weapon of war in conflicts worldwide including Libya to terrorize populations and often force civilians to flee, a U.N. expert charged Friday.
Most perpetrators go unpunished as sexual violence thrives in a climate of impunity where victims are denied justice or reparations, said Margot Wallstrom, special representative of the U.N. chief on sexual violence in conflict.
“Sexual violence has become a tactic of choice for armed groups, being cheaper, more destructive and easier to get away with than other methods of warfare,” she told a news briefing.


Wallstrom, making her first speech to the U.N. Human Rights Council since taking up the post in March 2010, called for all countries caught up in conflict to prevent such war crimes and prosecute troops or commanders under suspicion.
“Violence against women is no more permissible in times of war than it is in times of peace. And yet, in contemporary conflicts, women and girls are the primary targets of sexual violence, including as a tactic of war,” she said.


Her office is drawing up a blacklist to “name and shame” states that may be subject to Security Council sanctions, under a resolution adopted last December, according to Wallstrom.
It will probably start with Democratic Republic of the Congo, where at least 200,000 women and girls have been abused, although some estimates are 20 times that figure, she said.


International Criminal Court investigators have evidence linking Libyan leader Moammar Gadhafi to a policy of raping opponents and may bring separate charges on the issue, ICC chief prosecutor Luis Moreno-Ocampo said Wednesday.
Cherif Bassiouni, head of a U.N. rights inquiry which went to areas controlled by both rebels and Gadhafi, appeared to cast doubt on the ICC report Thursday, although his team’s report accused government forces of murder, torture and abduction.


Bassiouni said each side had accused the other of deploying fighters armed with impotency drugs to carry out rapes, creating what he called a “massive hysteria” in Libya. His team uncovered only four alleged cases – Eman al-Obaidi who claimed she was gang-raped by pro-government militiamen and three women in Misrata who said they had been sexually abused.


But Wallstrom, a former Swedish minister, said information collected by her office backed Moreno-Ocampo’s view. “Everything we see and hear reported points to that,” she said.
“What we have is consistent reports from people, from organizations, from U.N. entities and others on the ground,” she added. “It is difficult to give you a figure, but this is part of the arsenal, the weaponry that Gadhafi’s troops use.”


Shariah-inspired laws in Libya and Sudan that can be used to punish a rape victim should be scrapped, she said.
“I understand in their [Libyan] legislation for example, you could be flogged. Very often women who report rape can themselves be accused of adultery or risk this kind of punishment,” she said, adding that Sudan allows stoning.
“That is what they all have to look at so it is not stone-age legislation as well that will prevent women from actually coming forward. They will never get the reports on rape if this is the risk that women run.”



 
Readers Comments (0)
Add your comment

Enter the security code below*

 Can't read this? Try Another.
 
Related News
Down but not out, Haftar still looms over Libya peace process
Turkey's Erdogan meets with head of Libya's UN-recognized govt
Media watchdog urges Libyan gov't to release reporter
Key Libyan interior minister suspended amid protests
Russia and Turkey agree to push for Libya ceasefire, says Moscow
Related Articles
Divisions over Libya are now spreading across the Mediterranean
Erdogan wades into Libya quagmire
It’s time to tackle inequality from the middle
Haftar’s rebranded Libya coups
Russia’s mediation goals in Libya
Copyright 2024 . All rights reserved