Ottawa Citizen

Canada mulls donating to UN fund for victims

Money supports those exploited by peacekeepe­rs

- LEE BERTHIAUME

OTTAWA • Canada is in talks with the United Nations about donating money to a special trust fund set up for victims of sexual abuse by peacekeepe­rs, a senior UN official revealed on Wednesday.

Atul Khare, the undersecre­tary-general for peacekeepi­ng field support, wouldn’t say how much Canada is looking to provide for the Trust Fund in Support of Victims of Sexual Exploitati­on and Abuse.

He described it as a “very major contributi­on” that would be spread out over two years and help provide support and services to those who have been abused.

Khare revealed the talks during a news conference at UN headquarte­rs in New York with Defence Minister Harjit Sajjan and JeanPierre Lacroix, under-secretary-general for peacekeepi­ng operations.

The three were commemorat­ing the Internatio­nal Day of the UN Peacekeepe­r, which is held every year in honour of the more than 3,500 blue helmets who have been killed since 1948.

The news that Canada could contribute to the trust fund comes as the UN struggles with revelation­s that peacekeepe­rs either abused or exploited the very people they were to protect in a number of countries.

Canadians have been among those implicated; UN figures show that three Canadian police officers deployed to Haiti have been accused of sexual abuse or exploitati­on since 2015.

The most recent accusation, which the UN is currently investigat­ing, was made in March. In another incident dating from 2015, a peacekeepe­r was sent home for what the UN termed “administra­tive action.”

The third incident is also from 2015 and still under investigat­ion. The UN does not publicly identify alleged perpetrato­rs.

Sajjan emphasized the need to reform and modernize peacekeepi­ng during his news conference with Khare and Lacroix, as well as during an earlier speech to the Internatio­nal Peacekeepi­ng Institute (IPI).

That includes increasing the role of women when it comes to planning and implementi­ng peacekeepi­ng operations, a message that Liberal ministers have also made at NATO.

“We in Canada feel strongly about the integratio­n of women at all levels and in all roles in the promotion of peace and security,” Sajjan said in prepared remarks to the IPI.

“We know that local conflicts and crises often affect women and girls differentl­y and more severely than they affect other demographi­c groups.”

But Sajjan did not specifical­ly address the issue of sexual abuse or exploitati­on by peacekeepe­rs, or whether Canada would become the sixth country to contribute to the special trust fund.

The fund currently has only about $436,000, according to the UN, with contributi­ons from Bhutan, Cyprus, India, Japan and Norway.

The money is not given directly to the victims, a UN spokesman said, but goes to pay for such services and support as community outreach and education.

Sajjan’s visit to the UN on Wednesday was largely intended to set the stage for Canada hosting a major peacekeepi­ng summit in Vancouver in November.

It was also expected to produce some awkward questions over the Liberal government’s failure, at least to this point, to make good on its promise to provide up to 600 Canadian troops for peacekeepi­ng.

But both Khare and Lacroix kept any misgivings well hidden, as both thanked Canada for its commitment to peacekeepi­ng, while Sajjan showed no sign the government was rethinking its earlier promise of troops.

 ?? DARREN CALABRESE / THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? United Nations Under-Secretary-General for Field Support Atul Khare says Canada is considerin­g a “very major contributi­on” to a UN trust fund that provides support for people sexually abused by peacekeepe­rs.
DARREN CALABRESE / THE CANADIAN PRESS United Nations Under-Secretary-General for Field Support Atul Khare says Canada is considerin­g a “very major contributi­on” to a UN trust fund that provides support for people sexually abused by peacekeepe­rs.

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