Go After the
rapists, not their victims
Zainab Hawa Bangura ;
The United Nations Special Representative of the Secretary-General
on Sexual Violence in Conflict
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JAKARTA
POST, 07 Februari 2013
Thousands of women are raped every day in
the context of conflict, but very few find the courage to come forward as
this woman did. Instead of investigating those who allegedly assaulted her,
it is the woman and the journalist who tried to tell her story who are now
on trial in Somalia. This is completely unacceptable.
Numerous
stories have been written about this rape case that allegedly began in a
camp for internally displaced persons outside Mogadishu. The reporter had
yet to publish the interview in any media outlet before his arrest, but the
Government of Somalia contends that the woman fabricated her story and that
she was offered money in an effort to tarnish its reputation.
They base this
partially on the fact that the woman, under interrogation when initially in
custody, recanted her story. She was released, but it is telling that
despite the hostile and conservative environment in which she found
herself, she immediately resurfaced her case with the Attorney General upon
her release, stating that she recanted only because she was threatened
while in custody.
As of now, the
woman and the journalist have been charged under Article 269 of the Somali
penal code with offending the honor of a state institution, which carries a
jail term of several years. They, along with the woman’s husband and two
people who acted as intermediaries, also face charges linked to bribery.
Only the woman, who is breastfeeding, is not currently in prison, with the
trial set for Feb. 2.
The authorities
have a legal and moral obligation to investigate every report of rape.
However, putting the victim and those who encouraged her to come forward on
trial sends a clear message not just to women in Somalia, but to women
around the world, that they should keep quiet or face the wrath of the
state that is supposed to protect them.
These actions
also have a chilling effect on journalists, when one who tried to shine a
light on the alarming number of sexual assaults in internally displaced
persons (IDP) camps in Somalia is arrested.
The United
Nations has confirmed that between January and November 2012, 1,700 women
were raped in IDP camps in and around Mogadishu. We know that this
represents a fraction of actual attacks as many survivors of rape do not
have access to medical facilities for examinations, or are too afraid or
ashamed to report sexual violence.
Regardless of
the facts of this particular case, by criminalizing women who allege they
have been raped, the nascent Somali government has reinforced the culture of
silence and stigma surrounding sexual violence, and emboldened perpetrators
and would-be perpetrators who commit this crime with impunity and the
knowledge that they will be protected by the inaction of the state and the
shame of their victims.
It is time to
change that terrible equation. It is time for governments to take ownership
of the very real and damaging problem of sexual violence in conflict. Only
by acknowledging that there is a problem and taking active steps to address
it will we finally begin to break what has long been called history’s
greatest silence.
My office and
the entire United Nations system are ready to assist states with the
capacity building measures necessary to tackle the scourge of
conflict-related sexual violence, but we must first start with the premise
that reporting rape is no criminal offense; not going after the
perpetrators who commit this crime is.
Today the eyes
of the world are upon Somalia. The Government of Somalia has expressed its
commitment to fighting sexual violence in all its forms; now is the time to
turn these pledges into action. ●
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