UN Experts
call for UN special investigation into epic levels of sexual violence in South
Sudan
NAIROBI/GENEVA
(2 December 2016) – Sexual violence has reached epic proportions in the
conflict in South Sudan and requires the urgent attention of the world, said
the UN independent Commission* on Human Rights in South Sudan after a ten-day
visit during which they met women survivors around the country.
“The scale of
gang rape of civilian women as well as the horrendous nature of the rapes by
armed men belonging to all groups is utterly repugnant and what’s worse is that
there is no sense of outrage about this horror,” said the chairperson of the
Commission, Yasmin Sooka. “There was justifiable uproar when international
humanitarian workers were gang raped in July in the capital Juba but the fact
of the matter is that it is happening to South Sudanese women on a daily basis
and the world is just averting its eyes.”
The Commission
intends to call for the establishment of a special investigative team to go to
South Sudan to collect evidence of the rapes so as to form the basis of
prosecutions for the future. The Commission urges the Government of South Sudan
and those in control of opposition territories to give UN investigators
unfettered access to all areas of the country.
While in South
Sudan, the Commission interviewed a rape survivor whose case was mediated by
village elders who ordered the perpetrator to pay compensation of a goat and a
small sum of money. For many women this sort of informal mediation system is
the only justice system available.
“It is mind
boggling that a woman’s suffering and its lifelong impact has so little value,
not to mention that serious crimes like rape must be tried in a court of law
with due process,” said Commissioner Ken Scott.
In the capital
Juba, a UN survey found seventy percent of women in Juba had suffered sexual
assault since December 2013. In the outbreak of violence in the capital in
July, hundreds of women reported rape. The Commission met several who had still
not received the necessary medical treatment for terrible injures they
sustained. An elderly woman who had left the camp to search for food thought
her age would protect her from assault, only to experience beating and rape at
the hands of soldiers who she said were young enough to be her sons. She
explained the ethnic nature of the attacks by describing how the soldiers
grabbed her cheeks, making derogatory references to her tribal markings. After
the assault, her shattered body was transported back to the camp in a
wheelbarrow by a passerby. Another woman who was five months pregnant described
going out of the camp with four other women, all of whom were each gang raped
by seven soldiers. She suffered a miscarriage afterwards but described how one
of her companions died after being sexually mutilated. Rape survivors also
suffer the stigma and shame of the rape with many indicating that their
husbands had left them, blaming them for the rape. They are also ostracized by
the community resulting in deep trauma. This has also raised concern about the
longer-term psychosocial well-being of survivors.
In Bentiu in
Unity State, the Commission heard of a number of women raped by soldiers
outside the camp for displaced people on the day they visited. Despite the
stigma, a woman in Bentiu described in a public meeting how she was raped and
threatened with death by soldiers in Leer three days prior to the Commission’s
visit and was still searching for her husband after the attack on their
village. “There is no stigma around rape because for us it is normal; it is
happening every day to us,” she said, “I am speaking out because I am someone
who has been attacked but I want to say yes to life.” In Malakal in Upper Nile
State, the UN Population Fund indicated that one in five women in the
Protection of Civilian camp reported being sexually violated since the outbreak
of the conflict. However conflict-related sexual violence mostly goes
unreported.
The Commission
also heard reports of women being abducted and subjected to sexual slavery by
armed groups who move them from house to house resulting in the girls not being
found. Women have also been raped inside displacement camps, and there are
increasingly high levels of domestic violence.
“What concerns
us is the pattern of sexual violence targeting women all over the country, the
fact that rape is one of the tools being used for ethnic cleansing and the
absolute impunity for these crimes,” said Ms. Sooka. All commanders at every
level have an affirmative responsibility to prevent and punish rape and other
sexual violence. The Commission believes the only way to curb the
“normalization” of rape is to conduct investigations leading to prosecution for
those in command.
ENDS
*The
Commissioners are: Yasmin Sooka (Chairperson), Kenneth Scott and Godfrey
Musila.
Video of the
Mission to South Sudan is available at https://we.tl/gEkzl0yDL0 and
https://we.tl/eWMjk96xX9
For more
information, please contact Joseph Bonsu on jbonsu@ohchr.org and +41 79 109
6870 and Frances Harrison on francescsharrison@gmail.com and +44 794 648 8089.
For more
information about the UN Commission on Human Rights in South Sudan, please see:
http://www.ohchr.org/EN/HRBodies/HRC/CoHSouthSudan/Pages/Index.aspx
Commission on
Twitter: @ssudanchr
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