The Asian Age

‘ UN received 138 allegation­s of sexual misconduct in ’ 17’

Report compiled by UNSG Guterres shows numbers dropped from 165 in 2016

- — PTI

United Nations: The United Nations received 138 allegation­s of sexual exploitati­on and abuse last year and nearly half of them were against the personnel deployed at its peacekeepi­ng and special political missions, a report said on Wednesday.

The report compiled by UN Secretary- General Antonio Guterres on implementi­ng a zero- tolerance policy for these crimes, the number of such allegation­s brought against the personnel serving with the UN dropped from 165 in 2016 to 138 last year.

Special coordinato­r on Improving UN Response to Sexual Exploitati­on and Abuse Jane Holl Lute said on Tuesday that the report underscore­d the SecretaryG­eneral’s consistent message that no one serving under the UN flag should be associated with sexual exploitati­on and abuse. “It remains one of his key priorities,” she said.

Lute said that data from 2017 indicates a “downward trend” in the number of allegation­s reported. Overall, there were 138 allegation­s last year, compared to 165 in 2016. Of this number, 62 concerned personnel deployed to UN peacekeepi­ng and special political missions: down from 104 the previous year, she said. However, she said

Special coordinato­r on Improving UN Response to Sexual Exploitati­on and Abuse Jane Holl Lute said that the report underscore­d the secretary- general’s consistent message that no one serving under the UN flag should be associated with sexual exploitati­on and abuse

allegation­s emanating from other UN entities and their implementi­ng partners increased over the same period from 42 to 75. At the same time, there was “a sharp decline” in allegation­s involving nonUN forces, from 18 in 2016 to one in 2017.

The UN has implemente­d several measures over the past year to tackle the scourge since Guterres launched a system- wide strategy to prevent and respond to sexual exploitati­on and abuse. The initiative­s’ focus on areas such as putting victims first, ending impunity and increasing partnershi­ps; for example, with civil society. They include the appointmen­t of a Victims’ Rights Advocate, responding rapidly to allegation­s and ensuring that UN staff understand their responsibi­lities and obligation­s to prevent and report incidents.

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