The UN’s office for human rights has said
refugee minors in Bangui, in the Central African Republic (CAR), have accused
EU flag-wearing soldiers of sexual abuse. Two local girls, aged 14 to 16, said
they were raped by peacekeepers in the Eufor-CAR mission. Two others, in the
same age group, said they were paid for sex. Three of the four girls said the
soldiers were from Georgia, which contributed 140 members to the EU’s
700-strong operation. Refugee children also accused French soldiers in the
Sangaris operation, a unilateral mission. A seven-year old girl said she
performed oral sex on a French soldier in return for a bottle of water and a
pack of biscuits. A nine-year old boy said he, and several others, were abused.
Children also accused UN peacekeepers. The UN assistant secretary general,
Anthony Banbury, said on Friday (29 January) he knows of four new cases in
Bangui. He said there were 22 UN cases in Central Africa last year, and 69 in
total in the UN’s 16 missions around the world. Zeid Ra’ad Al Hussein, the UN
high commissioner for human rights, said, also on Friday, she alerted the EU,
Georgia, and France on 19 January. She said she was “heartened” by their
reaction. But she added: “Far too many of these crimes continue to go
unpunished, with the perpetrators enjoying full impunity. This simply
encourages further violations.” Banbury told press in New York: “It’s hard to
imagine the outrage that people working for the United Nations in the causes of
peace and security feel when these kinds of allegations come to light.” The
Guardian, a British daily, said he was close to tears. For its part, the EU
foreign service said it has “a zero-tolerance policy as regards sexual
misconduct or criminal activity.” But it added that “responsibility for any
investigation, disciplinary or criminal action remains in the hands of the
contributing states.” The Georgian
defence ministry said: “In case such grave crimes are proven, perpetrators …
will be brought to justice.” France made similar promises. The EU sent Eufor-CAR to Central Africa in
April 2014 to protect refugees in a brutal civil war. It pulled out in March
2015. Troops mostly came from EU states Estonia, Finland, France, Latvia,
Luxembourg, the Netherlands, Poland, Romania, and Spain. Georgia, an EU and Nato-aspirant state,
sometimes takes part in EU operations.
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