The Guardian (USA)

Médecins Sans Frontières pulls images of teenage rape survivor after outcry

- David Batty

Médecins Sans Frontières has removed photograph­s of a teenage rape survivor from its website after criticism that the images were unethical and racist.

MSF took down two photos of a 16-year-old girl from the Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC) who was gang-raped by three armed men afterphoto­graphers, activists and human rights lawyers condemned the images on Twitter.

A spokespers­on said the medical NGO accepted that it had been “a misjudgmen­t … to publish identifiab­le pictures of a minor who had been through this experience”.

He said the orphaned girl, who had been raped two months before the photoshoot, consented to being photograph­ed, but that MSF had decided that was insufficie­nt justificat­ion to publish the pictures “considerin­g her age and the kind of trauma she had gone through”.

The photograph­s, which show the girl lying on a bench after receiving treatment at an MSF hospital, were taken in Drodro, a refugee camp in Ituri province. They came under fire after Benjamin Chesterton, the director of the UK film production company Duckrabbit, criticised their portrayal of black African women and girls who had survived sexual assault as racist and dehumanisi­ng.

MSF initially defended the project but after continued condemnati­on from Chesterton, who has previously worked for the NGO in DRC, it removed five photos, including two of the girl, from an article on its website that also mentions her first name.

The Iranian Magnum photograph­erNewsha Tavakolian, who took the photos, said MSF had removed the images without informing her.

Tavakolian said MSF had selected the photos for publicatio­n: “They also refrained from publicly explaining the reasons for making this decision, nor did they highlight the fact that I was never told not to take images of minors. It simply was never discussed,” she said.

She defended the project – Ituri, a Glimmer through the Crack – which she said reflected the fact that many rape survivors in DRC were teenagers. She “isn’t a ‘typical’ 16-year-old, living a child’s life in a world of comfort. No, she lives in east Congo, in an area where rape is an instrument of war,” she said.

The MSF spokesman accepted that the NGO’s guidelines for photograph­ers and filmmakers on how to handle such cases, in which a minor who has survived sexual violence does not have parents or guardians, were inadequate.

“That is why we are working to revise them to provide greater clarity on issues around images of identifiab­le minors who have suffered significan­t trauma,” he said.

Sherizaan Minwalla, a human rights lawyer who works with Yazidi survivors of sexual enslavemen­t by Isis, contested MSF’s view that the girl had been able to give informed consent.

“Even if she was dying to tell everyone that she was gang-raped so she can help other people, they need to be able to say she’s a minor, the perpetrato­rs are still at large, we’re not acting in the best interests of the victim if we move forward,” she said adding that MSF’s guidelines needed to be strengthen­ed to avoid exploiting minors. “You’re putting her at risk of retaliatio­n, as well as stigma and shame,” she said.

Martha Tadesse, an Ethiopian photograph­er who also criticised the photos on Twitter, said there was a racist double-standard in the treatment of black African survivors of sexual violence. It was inconceiva­ble that similar photos of a white European or US minor would have been published, she said.

“You can’t just smash their childhood like that because they are a black child,” she said. “Don’t give me this black trauma porn, making it, ‘Oh, Congo is different’. It’s gaslightin­g.”

An internal statement signed two years ago by 1,000 current and former MSF staff accused the NGO of being institutio­nally racist and reinforcin­g colonialis­m and white supremacy in its humanitari­an work.

Magnum Photos completed a safeguardi­ng review of its archive of more than 1 million images last year after accusation­s it made photograph­s available that may show the sexual exploitati­on of minors.

A spokespers­on for the agency said: “We are satisfied that Newsha’s photos and account of her trip to DRC with MSF are in line with Magnum’s code of ethics and that, given the specific context, Newsha acted with considerat­ion to the people that she photograph­ed.”

 ?? Photograph: Régis Duvignau/Reuters ?? MSF took the decision after photograph­ers, activists and human rights lawyers condemned the images on Twitter.
Photograph: Régis Duvignau/Reuters MSF took the decision after photograph­ers, activists and human rights lawyers condemned the images on Twitter.

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