UN troops in south Sudan raping Children-report.

Sassylassie

House Member
Jan 31, 2006
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Sadly the last vestiges of humanity have been stripped from the UN, it's not able to do the job that it was created to do. The corruption is beyond my comprehension, and allowing backward dictatorships' countries to join whose troops rape the victims in war zones they are payed and mandated to protect. Are we in the west this "Retarded" to support this organization of pigs and pedophiles. Words fail me, I can't begin to articulate what I think of these filthy vile MEN. Women and children have no value under UN mandates, fines--they fine rapists. ANIMALS.

I hope someone leaks those video tapes, I want the Rapists' Countries held accountable.

UN troops in south Sudan raping children -report
03 Jan 2007 00:50:06 GMT
Source: Reuters

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Background


Sudan conflicts
South Sudan fragile peace
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UNITED NATIONS, Jan 2 (Reuters) - The Daily Telegraph of London reported on Tuesday that U.N. peacekeepers and civilian staff were raping and abusing children as young as 12 in southern Sudan.
The newspaper, in a story posted on its Web site, said it had gathered accounts from more than 20 young victims in the town of Juba of U.N. civilian and peacekeeping staff forcing them to have sex.
The U.N. Peacekeeping Department in New York declined to comment. The report appeared on the first day of work for U.N. leader Ban Ki-moon of South Korea, who this week became the world body's eighth secretary-general, succeeding Kofi Annan of Ghana.
There are more than 11,000 U.N. peacekeepers and police from some 70 countries in southern Sudan, enforcing a January 2005 peace agreement that ended a 21-year civil war.
The Telegraph said the first signs of sexual exploitation of local youths in southern Sudan emerged within months of the peacekeepers' arrival in March 2005. The U.N. Children's Fund UNICEF drafted an internal report detailing the problem, it said.
The newspaper said Sudan's government had gathered evidence including video footage of U.N. workers having sex with young girls. But the United Nations has yet to publicly acknowledge there was a problem or even investigate, the newspaper said.
The United Nations, working with the African Union, is now pressing the Sudanese government to admit thousands more peacekeepers to its western Darfur region, where a separate civil war has raged for three years.
The government has been resisting letting the reinforcements into Darfur, calling it an attempt to recolonize the vast northern African nation.
Sexual abuse charges have surfaced for decades in U.N. peacekeeping missions and among civilian and other humanitarian staff operating in world hot spots.
But the United Nations began seriously pursuing offenders in the past two years after reports of widespread abuse in the Democratic Republic of Congo, where it has 17,000 troops.
Since January 2004, the United Nations has investigated abuse allegations against 319 military and civilian personnel in all its missions, the world body said in late November.
It has disciplined 179 soldiers, civilians and police since then but acknowledges minors and the poor are still exploited.
 

tracy

House Member
Nov 10, 2005
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California
I think this story is sickening, but I would hardly use it as a condemnation of the entire UN. You won't find a military mission anywhere in which troops don't do some terrible things. There are several US marines on trial right now for raping a young woman and killing her and her entire family. They aren't representative of the hundreds of thousands of soldiers who serve honourably.
 

I think not

Hall of Fame Member
Apr 12, 2005
10,506
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The Evil Empire
I'm inclined to agree and disagree with Tracy. I'm no big fan of the UN, but they cannot be held accountable for the actions of soldiers. I WILL hold them accountable however for sitting on the issue and turning a blind eye and do nothing about it.
 

Sassylassie

House Member
Jan 31, 2006
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L, the UN members lists looks like a list of Countries that violate Human Rights. The UN is useless, I can think of only one sucessful mandate and hell we were there for over 20 years.

I want the name of the Countries involved published, now that should be interesting reading.
 

tracy

House Member
Nov 10, 2005
3,500
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48
California
Are they doing nothing? The article says they are seriously pursuing offenders doesn't it? What exactly do they mean by that?
 

RomSpaceKnight

Council Member
Oct 30, 2006
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London, Ont. Canada
I really hate to say this but "Want to bet that the soldiers come from third world nations". Child labour or prostitution is rampant in a lot of 3rd world countries. Sub-saharan Africa is dying of AIDS because of medieval ideas of male superiority. Men go to cities to find work. Consort with prostitutes or have mistresses and then return to rural areas and infect their wives. There is an "Army of the Lord' I think it is called that is composed of child soldiers that rampages acros northern Uganda. Tribal and religious violence rocks Nigeria, second only to South Africa in population and first in resources. Drawing trops from such countries is bound to lead to such atrocities. Decades of war, disease and famine have drained many countries of moral and monetary resources. Can we hold an 18yr old Bangledeshi soldier, making tuppence a month, and far from home, consorting with a 14 yr old Sudanese girl, who is selling herself for food for herself, and her family to the same code of conduct that a Canadian soldier would be held to? Does our moderate climate, plentiful resources and low population give us the right to impose our level of morals on others? Canadian soldiers in Somalia beat and tortured a young man to death, and US soldiers in Iraq are on trial for rape and muder. We the developed and priveledged are not immune to scandal and crime. What would the future hold for many kids in 3rd world countries with out the UN (UNICEF, UNESCO etc.)and other NGO's?