French, UN troops accused of horrendous abuse in CAR
French, UN troops accused of horrendous abuse in CAR
Thu Mar 31, 2016 5:39AM
This picture, taken on
February 18, 2014, shows French troops at a checkpoint in Bangui, the
Central African Republic (CAR). (By AFP)
French troops and UN
peacekeepers in the Central African Republic (CAR) are facing “extremely
troubling” allegations of abusing the local population. The
United Nations said in a statement on Wednesday that a UN team has
received accounts that French troops, known as the Sangaris, forced
girls to engage in sexual acts with animals in return for a small amount
of money.
“We’ve received reports of cases of
bestiality involving French troops but we have not confirmed them at
this point,” an unnamed UN official said.
“The exact number and nature of these extremely troubling allegations are still being determined,” the statement added. According to the statement, the victims were abused between 2013 and 2015 in the Kemo Prefecture of the country. A
UN team was sent to the area this week to interview victims and gather
information on the latest wave of allegations hitting the UN
Multidimensional Integrated Stabilization Mission in the Central African
Republic (MINUSCA) force. The statement further said that UN troops from Burundi and Gabon will be confined to their bases during the probe. This
file photo shows residents as they walk near the United Nations Square
in Bangui, the Central African Republic (CAR). (By AFP)Advocacy
group AIDS-Free World, a non-governmental organization that has been
monitoring cases of sex abuse by peacekeepers, described the latest
allegations as “shocking.”
The advocacy group said in a press that
three girls told a UN rights officer that in 2014 they were tied up and
undressed by a Sangaris military commander inside a camp and forced to
have sex with a dog.
The UN Security Council is due to hear a report on the latest allegations during a closed-door meeting on Thursday.
On
Monday, the UN reported two new cases of sexual abuse, including that
of a 14-year-old girl, by Burundian and Moroccan troops in the African
state.
In August, UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon fired the
mission chief in the CAR over increasing allegations of sexual abuse of
children by the forces under his watch.
France has thousands of troops in the CAR, 14 of whom are under investigation over the allegations.
The
CAR plunged into crisis in December 2013, when anti-balaka militia
began coordinated attacks against the Seleka group, which had toppled
the government in March that year.
France effectively invaded the
CAR, a former French colony, after the UN Security Council adopted a
resolution giving the African Union and France the go-ahead to send
troops to the country.