UN peacekeepers 'fathered and abandoned thousands of children' in DRC
UN peacekeepers from 12 countries ‘have fathered and abandoned thousands of children’ over past 20 years in Democratic Republic of Congo, study claims
- Claims that UN peacekeepers father them abandon children in Congo
- They ‘abuse children, rape young women and traded food for ‘survival sex”
- Interviews with dozens of mothers and children found many live in poverty
- Peacekeepers father children then leave the country and mothers to struggle
A shocking new report has claimed that UN peacekeepers from 12 different countries have fathered and then abandoned thousands of children in poverty-stricken Democratic Republic of Congo since 1999.
The report also claims that soldiers and police operating under a UN mandate in the war torn country have abused children, raped young women and traded food for ‘survival sex.’
One victim was just ten years old when her aunt trafficked her to UN peacekeepers who plied her with beer, raped her and got her pregnant, the report states.
The majority of the absent fathers were from Tanzania and South Africa, while others were from Morocco, Uruguay, Nepal and Bangladesh.
The men were in the country in roles ranging from soldiers, officers and pilots to drivers, cooks, doctors and photographers.
UN peacekeepers first went into the DRC in 1999 as part of a ceasefire agreement to stop the Second Congo War, fought between itself and Rwanda, Uganda, Angola, Zimbabwe and Nabibia along with rebel movements.
A shocking new report has claimed that UN peacekeepers from 12 different countries have fathered and then abandoned thousands of children in poverty-stricken Democratic Republic of Congo since 1999
The report also claims that soldiers and police operating under a UN mandate in the war torn country abused children, raped young women and traded food for ‘survival sex.’ Pictured: Bangladeshi soldiers of the United Nations Mission in DR Congo (MONUSCO) shoot at militiamen to protect the withdrawal of a Red Cross team
The majority of the absent fathers were from Tanzania and South Africa, while others were from Morocco, Uruguay, Nepal and Bangladesh. Pictured: Indian military from Monusco, the U.N. mission in the Democratic Republic of Congo
Families gather in front of the coffins of activists who died during demonstrations that took place in Goma from July 25 to 27 to demand the departure of United Nations Organization Stabilization Mission in the Democratic Republic of the Congo (MONUSCO), in Goma on August 5
Major protests against the presence of the UN peacekeeping mission, known as The United Nations Organisation Stabilisation Mission in the Democratic Republic of Congo (MONUSCO), have rocked the east of the country in recent weeks
Sexual abuse and exploitation became a serious concern not long after the UN troops entered the country, The Conversation reports.
The presence of peacekeepers often sees a rapid increase in sex trafficking and brothels near military bases, child prostitution, the exchange of sex for goods or food and the spread of sexually transmitted diseases such as HIV.
Although there are supposed to be policies in place to prevent the misconduct, it has become recognised as a systemic problem and every UN mission has been associated with allegations of sexual exploitation and abuse.
The youngest girl to the researchers interviewed to have a child with a peacekeeper was just ten years old, while half were under the age of eighteen when they got pregnant.
The research was led by a team from the University of Birmingham who spoke to dozens of peacekeepers’ children aged between six and 19. They also spoke in-depth to the mothers and carried out thousands of interviews in total.
Of the 2,858 interviews carried out, nearly half (1,182 people) raised, unprompted, the issues of peacekeeper abuse and abandoned children.
They found that the mothers of these children were often rejected by their own families and stigmatised within their communities, while the children grew up in abject want and poverty, neglected and excluded.
The Special Adviser of the UN Secretary General, Prince Zeid Raad Al-Hussein, acknowledged in 2005 that ‘many victims, especially those who have ‘peacekeeper babies’ and have been abandoned by the fathers, are in desperate financial situation[s]’
UN peacekeepers first went into the DRC in 1999 as part of a ceasefire agreement to stop the Second Congo War, fought between itself and Rwanda, Uganda, Angola, Zimbabwe and Nabibia along with rebel movements
Sexual abuse and exploitation by UN peacekeepers became a serious concern not long after the UN troops entered the country
The presence of peacekeepers often sees a rapid increase in sex trafficking and brothels near military bases, child prostitution, the exchange of sex for goods or food and the spread of sexually transmitted diseases such as HIV
Kirstin Wagner, who worked on the research, said: ‘The DRC remains one of the poorest and most conflict-ridden countries in the world.
‘The duration and size of the peacekeeping mission there suggests there are significant numbers of children born as a result of sexual abuse.
‘There are potentially thousands of children left behind by peacekeepers in the DRC,’ she said.
‘Part of the problem is that some of those deployed seem to be treating these missions as an opportunity for sex tourism and sexual crimes that they are unlikely to commit in their home countries.’
Most mothers described their sexual contact with UN personnel as ‘transactional’, according to Wagner. It was based on the exchange of food, clothing and money, with occasional arrangements for soldiers to pay girls’ school fees in return for sex.
She added: ‘Some women engaged in sex because they wanted a cellphone or a new hairdo or new shoes. That is different from women having sex because they need food to live, what is called survival sex.’
The study focused on the experiences of children left without fathers. A 13-year-old said: ‘I never go to school. I have no food support and even when I do get food, I start thinking about my mother, who is living abroad, and my father, who I have never seen.
Monusco [the UN peacekeeping operation] should remember us who were left here in Kisangani. We are considered orphans.’
A UN peacekeeping spokesperson said: ‘Over the past five years, we have taken action to prevent these wrongs, investigate alleged perpetrators including military contingents, and hold them accountable including through repatriation.
Researchers found that the mothers of these children were often rejected by their own families and stigmatised within their communities, while the children grew up in abject want and poverty, neglected and excluded
Of the 2,858 interviews carried out, nearly half (1,182 people) raised, unprompted, the issues of peacekeeper abuse and abandoned children
‘We continue to publicly report on allegations as we receive them and on the status of these allegations in our public database.
‘Personnel have been separated from the organisation, and no one who has been the subject of a substantiated investigation into sexual misconduct can be rehired within the system.’
As of this month, just 426 allegations of fathering children by peacekeepers have been logged since 2007, and of these only 44 have been substantiated. The rest are pending.
More than 97,000 peacekeepers from over 120 countries currently serve in 12 peacekeeping operations around the world.
Despite it being the duty of all UN personnel to protect and ‘do no harm’, sexual wrongdoings committed against local civilians, primarily young girls, have been reported wherever missions were put in place.
Major protests against the presence of the UN peacekeeping mission, known as The United Nations Organisation Stabilisation Mission in the Democratic Republic of Congo (MONUSCO), have rocked the east of the country in recent weeks.
But these protests are over a lack of protection from the peacekeeping operation against rebel groups, rather than the conduct of the peacekeepers towards the local populations.
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