Fiji Sun

Sexual Violence Used as Weapon of War in South Sudan: UN

- Xinhua

Sexual violence has been used as a weapon of war by all the parties of the South Sudan conflict, a United Nations (UN) envoy told the Security Council on Tuesday, noting a significan­t increase of perpetrati­ons this year.

Pramila Patten, the UN secretary-general’s special representa­tive on sexual violence in conflict, said the UN had witnessed systematic patterns of sexual violence since 2013 when the conflict started in South Sudan, but the phenomenon “escalated dramatical­ly” this year.

“In 2018, there has been a clear and alarming increase in the number of cases and victims of conflict-related sexual violence documented,” she said, adding that the number of victims has already reached 1157, the highest recorded in the last three years. First-hand testimony Ms Patten heard indicated that rape was used by the attackers “to exercise power over their victims, impose extreme humiliatio­n, destroy their dignity, and fracture families and the community.”

Most notably, Ms Patten pointed to the reports of mass rapes in Bentiu in November, where some 125 women and girls were reportedly raped, whipped and clubbed over 10 days while heading to a food distributi­on site. The UN team on the ground and the local authoritie­s have both launched investigat­ions into this matter, according to Ms Patten.

In a separate incident in October, 43 cases of rape or gang rape and the abduction of 505 women and 63 girls for the purpose of sexual slavery in Western Equatoria region were documented, she said.

Ms Patten added that sexual abuse would reportedly cease only when abducted women become fighters. Among the incidents Ms Patten cited to the Security Council, the alleged perpetrato­rs are from both the government troops and the opposition forces. Ms Patten said that, although the South Sudanese officials she met with reiterated that the violations are unacceptab­le, “the fact is that it is still largely ‘cost-free’ to rape in South Sudan.” Jean-Pierre Lacroix, the UN peacekeepi­ng chief who spoke to the Security Council before Patten, condemned “in the strongest terms” the continued prevalence of sexual violence and called on the South Sudanese parties to bring all those responsibl­e to justice.

Mr Lacroix appealed to the internatio­nal community to “pronounce itself and remind the parties that with such prevalent impunity, South Sudan would not be able to find a respectabl­e place among the community of nations.”

Moreover, Mr Patten urged the Security Council to apply sanctions for sexual violence crimes as a critical aspect of deterrence and prevention.

Ms Patten said her office, together with the Office of the High Commission­er on Human Rights, submitted on Monday the names of three alleged perpetrato­rs of a July incident in southern Unity state to the South Sudan sanctions committee of the council for its considerat­ion.

Ms Patten further called for comprehens­ive services to be provided for the survivors of sexual violence, particular­ly medical and psychosoci­al care, and for conflict-related sexual violence to be addressed as a central aspect of the revitalize­d peace agreement signed between the government and the opposition in September.

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