The Mercury News

France looks into rape case

Soldiers accused of abusing Central African children

- By Angela Charlton

PARIS — Paris prosecutor­s are investigat­ing accusation­s that French soldiers in Central African Republic sexually abused children they were sent to protect.

The French probe follows an initial United Nations investigat­ion into the allegation­s a year ago — both of which were kept secret until a report in the Guardian newspaper Wednesday forced officials to publicly acknowledg­e them.

A U. N. worker leaked informatio­n about the U. N. investigat­ion to French authoritie­s last year, the U. N. Secretary- General’s office said in a statement. That worker, identified by the Swedish government as Swede Anders Kompass, has been suspended and is now under internal investigat­ion.

Central African Republic has seen unpreceden­ted violence between Christians and Muslims since late 2013.

At least 5,000 people have been killed, and about 1 million are displaced internally or have fled the country. France sent troops in late 2013 and the U. N. set up a 12,000- strong peacekeepi­ng force in September last year.

Early in 2014, the Office of the High Commission­er for Human Rights in the country’s capital, Bangui, carried out a probe after “serious allegation­s of sexual exploitati­on and abuse of children by French military personnel,” the U. N. Secretary- General’s office said Wednesday.

The U. N. investigat­ion has now been passed on to French authoritie­s, said a spokesman for the U. N. human rights office in Geneva, Rupert Colville. t.

About 10 Central African children told U. N. officials in Central African Republic that they were sexually assaulted by French soldiers around the M’Poko airport between December 2013 and June 2014, the statement said.

The allegation­s of sexual abuse, the secretive nature of the probe and the treatment of the suspended U. N. worker all cast a new shadow on the world body, which has faced accusation­s of abuses by its peacekeepi­ng forces in the past.

The U. N. high commission­er for human rights, Zeid Raad al- Hussein, was the author of a lengthy report on preventing sexual exploitati­on by peacekeepe­rs that the global body commission­ed a decade ago after a scandal involving U. N. troops in Congo.

Known as the Zeid Report, it recommende­d among other things that allegation­s of abuse be followed by an investigat­ion and that U. N. member states should pledge to prosecute their soldiers as if the crime had been committed in their own country.

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