Nelson Mandela's widow, Graca Machel, joined prominent activists on Wednesday to call for a full inquiry on sexual abuse by U.N. peacekeepers and personnel following the furor over alleged child sexual assault by French troops in the Central African Republic.
The campaign dubbed "Code Blue" is to demand change in the United Nations' handling of sexual abuse allegations and hopes to enlist countries in a push for action.
Machel, who headed a U.N. study 19 years ago on the sexual abuse of children in conflict, lamented that "things have not changed, not improved."
"They have gotten worse," she told a news conference alongside former U.N. force commander Romeo Dallaire and other humanitarians.
Spearheaded by the non-governmental organization AIDS Free World, the group is demanding as a first step that there be an end to immunity afforded to U.N. personnel.
Paula Donovan, co-director of AIDS Free World, insisted that while U.N. chief Ban Ki-moon had waived immunity in cases involving sexual crimes, the bureaucracy surrounding the procedure had delayed investigations.
It was this immunity that allowed the United Nations to block French investigators from questioning U.N. rights officials who filed a report after interviewing children in the Central African Republic.
The children, among the tens of thousands of displaced people sheltering at a camp near the Bangui airport, testified that they were sexually abused in late 2013 by French soldiers in exchange for food.
French investigators were allowed to submit questions in writing to the U.N. authors of the report and received written replies, prompting Paris to open a formal investigation.
"A commission of inquiry would show a speedy way of getting to the perpetrators," said Machel. "It can be done."
- Troops sent back -
The United Nations has been under fire since the report on the sexual abuse of children by French, Chadian and Equatorial Guinean troops was leaked to the media last month.
Save the Children was among 21 organizations that wrote an open letter to Ban this week describing his response to the report as "deeply unsatisfactory" and called for action.
A former U.N. force commander in Rwanda, Dallaire said the bureaucracy surrounding sexual abuse cases was such that "more often than not, instead of an investigation, you see a plane arrive and a whole bunch of people being sent back."
The lieutenant-general spoke of a "culture of silence" within U.N. peacekeeping missions and said force commanders should be given more authority to deal directly with allegations of misconduct.
Under U.N. rules, criminal allegations involving soldiers in a UN peace mission are handled by the troop-contributing country, according to their national laws.
A U.N. internal oversight report released last month showed that allegations of sexual abuse against U.N. personnel and troops serving in U.N. missions had gone down from a high of 127 in 2007 to 41 last year.
But AIDS Free World argues that the figures are deceiving, because in some cases a single allegation could implicate five or more alleged perpetrators.
"Our track record, if you look back over the last decade or so, has greatly improved in terms of lowering the number of cases, increased transparency of reporting cases," said UN spokesman Stephane Dujarric.
"This is one of those issues where we can always do better."
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