Home
/
Isiam
/
Politics & Economics
/
UN: DR Congo troops committing rape
UN: DR Congo troops committing rape
Apr 23, 2025 8:30 AM

  Government soldiers in the DR Congo have attacked and raped women in villages where rebels already committed mass rape this summer, a high-level UN official has said.

  UN peacekeepers in the Walikale territory have reported that army troops are committing "rapes, killings and lootings," Margot Wallstrom, the special representative for sexual violence against women in conflict, told the UN security council on Thursday.

  Thousands of soldiers have been deployed in the region to enforce a presidential moratorium on mining and restore order. In July and August, according to the United Nations, members of so-called Mai Mai militias and the Democratic Forces for the Liberation of Rwanda (FDLR) raped more than 300 women and children in the region.

  Wallstrom called the new alleged army attacks "unacceptable and unimaginable" and called for the DR Congo government to investigate them and "hold any perpetrators to account".

  Call for sanctions

  Wallstrom also told the Security Council that the United Nations should impose sanctions on Lieutenant Colonal Serafim, a Hutu FDLR commander, who witnesses say helped oversee the earlier rapes.

  On October 5, Indian peacekeepers arrested Lieutenant Colonel Mayele, a Mai Mai militia leader whose troops allegedly participated in the rapes. But human rights activists have said the FDLR is the main perpetrator of such violence.

  Reportedly operating together, a faction of the Mai Mai under a man called Commander Cheka, FDLR troops and a third armed group took over 13 villages in Walikale and proceeded to rape 235 women, 52 girls, 13 men and 3 boys, according to a UN investigation published in September.

  The UN under-secretary general for peacekeeping operations told the Security Council last month that the United Nations had "failed" the victims.

  Wallstrom praised the Indian soldiers who arrested Mayele and called his arrest an "important precedent".

  "When commanders can no longer rest easy in the certainty of impunity, when it begins to cross their mind that they may be turned in by their own, for commissioning or condoning rape, this is the moment when we open a new front in the battle to end impunity," she said.

  PHOTO CAPTION

  A heavily armed Congo trooper provides security, with others unseen, for villagers on the outskirts of Walikale, Congo, Friday, Sept. 17, 2010.

  Source: Aljazeera.net

Comments
Welcome to mreligion comments! Please keep conversations courteous and on-topic. To fosterproductive and respectful conversations, you may see comments from our Community Managers.
Sign up to post
Sort by
Show More Comments
Politics & Economics
100.000 Yemenis fleeing from clashes need aid: UN
  More than 100,000 people in Yemen, many of them children, have fled their homes during a recent surge in fighting between the government and Houthi insurgents, a U.N. agency said on Friday.   The children's agency UNICEF and other U.N. aid bodies expressed serious concern about what they called a deteriorating...
Facebook removes Hamas fan page
  The networking Web site Facebook removed a fan page dedicated to supporters of Hamas leader Ismail Haniyeh, London-based Arabic newspaper Al-Hayat reported on Sunday.   The report published Sunday, said the Web page titled "Commander Haniyeh" had more than 10,000 friends when it was removed without any explanation.   The Palestinian Maan...
Blackwater still armed in Iraq
  Despite the Iraqi government's announcement earlier this year that it had canceled Blackwater's operating license, the US State Department continues to allow Blackwater operatives in Iraq to remain armed. A State Department official told The Nation that Blackwater (which recently renamed itself Xe Services) is now operating in Iraq under...
Once world's bread basket, Iraq now a farming basket case
  Once the cradle of agriculture for civilization, the Land Between Two Rivers - the Tigris and Euphrates - has become a basket case for its farmers.   Naj Habeeb and his son, Mustafa, grow rice in a field along the Euphrates River in Iraq's Mishkab village. Just ask Naji Habeeb, 85....
Palestinians use their own goods, fight dependence to Israel
  At Garden's grocery store in Ramallah, Dalia al-Khatib hands out fliers and showcases Palestinian goods for Intajuna ("Our Products"), one of many campaigns asking Palestinians to avoid Israeli products.   But across town, an all-Palestinian crew of laborers heads home after a day of work on the nearby Jewish settlement of...
The Bush administration's cover-up of the Dasht-e-Leili massacre
  A new administration is in the White House. And the prison at Guantanamo Bay will soon be closed. But the investigation into war crimes must not close with it. Guantanamo is neither the end nor the beginning of the story.   The Bush Administration's blatant disregard for the rule of law...
Destroyed Swat force displaced Pakistanis to stay in camp in Ramadan
  As the Muslim month of Ramadan begins, tens of thousands of Pakistanis forced to flee their homes by government offensive against the Taliban will have no choice but to languish in camps or host families over the month of fasting.   About 3 million people were forced from their homes by...
UN says 50 million women in Asia risk HIV
  An estimated 50 million women in Asia are at risk of becoming infected with the HIV virus from their husbands or other partners, according to a U.N. report published Tuesday.   The report produced by the Joint United Nations Program on HIV/AIDS, known as UNAIDS, and its partner organizations said the...
Uighur leader says 10,000 went missing in one night
  The exiled leader of China's Uighurs said nearly 10,000 of her people were detained or killed last month in ethnic unrest and appealed for the United Nations to investigate their fate.   Rebiya Kadeer, the US-based head of the World Uighur Congress, also said she was "perplexed" at the muted US...
Migrants to Italy face 'a kind of slavery'
  Thousands of migrants are being lured to Italy with false promises of work and forced to live in conditions akin to slavery, the International Organization for Migration (IOM) said Tuesday.   In a study of a migrant camp near the town of San Nicola Varco, 100 km (63 miles) south of...
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2025 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved