The Sunday Guardian

31 sexual abuse cases against un personnel in three months

- REUTERS REUTERS

UNITED NATIONS: Thirtyone new cases alleging sexual abuse or exploitati­on by United Nations personnel, nearly half of which involve the UN refugee agency, were filed between July and September for events stretching back at least three years, the UN said on Friday. Of the 31 cases, 12 involve military personnel from peacekeepi­ng operations including those in the Central African Republic and Mali. The majority of the civilian staff cases, 15, involve the office of the United Nations High Commission­er for Refugees. Three cases involve the Internatio­nal Organisati­on for Migration and one the United Nations Children’s Fund. A dozen of the reported alleged cases happened in 2017, two last year and six more in 2015 or prior. Ten of the cases involved sexual abuse and 19 sexual exploitati­on, with the remaining two unknown. One of Venezuela’s major opposition parties has decided to run in local elections next month despite a boycott by others, deepening a split in the Democratic Unity coalition to the glee of President Nicolas Maduro and his ruling Socialist Party.

Three of the four main groupings in the coalition have vowed not to participat­e in the 10 December balloting for 335 mayors and one governor because they believe the election system is rigged. But the fourth party, A New Time, based in oil-rich western Zulia state where the governorsh­ip is up for grabs, argues Maduro must still be fought at the ballot box to avoid simply handing him more political space.

Manuel Rosales, a former Zulia governor who fled to Peru in 2009 after corruption charges leveled by the government of Maduro’s predecesso­r Hugo Chavez, said on Thursday he would be running again on behalf of A New Time. “I‘m not going to leave Zulianos alone,” Rosales told supporters.

Rosales was jailed in 2015 on his return from exile. Authoritie­s lifted a ban on him running for office just this week.His party’s stance has infuriated many anti-Maduro activists. Another opposition leader won the Zulia governorsh­ip in elections last month but was prohibited from taking office for refusing to bow to a pro-Maduro legislativ­e superbody.

“He’s a sellout,” said Juan Carlos Rivero, 34, at an auto repair shop in Zulia state capital Maracaibo. He had voted for Rosales in the past but did not plan to in December. Having failed to oust Maduro via street protests earlier this year - which left at least 125 people dead - and having then performed badly in the 15 October gubernator­ial vote, Venezuela’s opposition is in its worst crisis of recent years. Though polls show it has majority support, and Venezuelan­s are angry at Maduro over an unpreceden­ted economic crisis, the opposition has failed to capitalize.

“When they lose elections, they cry fraud and when they know things are against them, instead of fighting, they withdraw,” Maduro said in a recent speech, adding that Venezuela’s elections were clean. There is speculatio­n the government may take advantage of opposition weakness by moving up the expected December 2018 date for Venezuela’s next presidenti­al election.

Various opposition politician­s, including twice-presidenti­al candidate Henrique Capriles, remain banned from standing for office on various charges of corruption or plotting. And rights groups say there are nearly 400 political prisoners, including well-known protest leader Leopoldo Lopez. Authoritie­s deny political persecutio­n, saying all detentions of politician­s are for breaking the law.

In the latest threats against opposition leaders, Maduro said in a speech on Friday that congress head Julio Borges should be tried for treason after lobbying against his government abroad, including in financial circles. The pro-Maduro Supreme Court, meanwhile, said opposition leader Freddy Guevara - who runs the militant Popular Will party in the absence of its leader Lopez - should be prosecuted for “instigatio­n” and using children in protests.

Guevara, who is congress vice president, was prohibited from leaving the country. Maduro has been exulting in the opposition disarray, saying parties ordering members to abstain next month were behaving undemocrat­ically even as they accuse him of being a “dictator.”

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