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Reproductive Justice and Gender

Rape in War: Will the United Nations Walk Its Talk?

By Marianne Mollmann, RH Reality Check. Posted July 9, 2008.


The U.N. has talked about rape as a tool of war before. Hopefully this time around they'll actually do something about it.
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On June 19, 2008, the United Nations Security Council made history by declaring that rape in war is such a bad idea they plan to do something about it.

That's right. After decades of reports on vicious sexual violence in conflicts across the globe, the highest decision-making body of the United Nations has decided that it is time to act. In fact, no other international actor has as much power to do something about rape in war, and as disappointing a record, as the United Nations Security Council.

It is not that the Security Council hasn't talked about the issue before. In 2000, the Security Council -- under intense pressure from women's groups and UN field personnel -- established a link between the Council's mandate and the way in which women and girls are affected differently by conflict than men and boys. This link is contained in a resolution, known mostly by its number (1325/2000), which includes an urgent call to end impunity for sexual violence and for the United Nations system to gather information on issues related to women and girls in conflict and report these to the Security Council.

Action to back up these good intentions has, however, been scarce. Every year in October since 2000, the Council has celebrated the anniversary of resolution 1325 by announcing the importance of the gender perspective in its work, and then proceeded to largely ignore it for the rest of the year.

Up until last Thursday, that is. On Thursday, the Security Council declared its readiness to act on sexual violence in a resolution that contains three key components:

  1. The resolution establishes sexual violence in conflict and post-conflict as a topic within the purview of the Council's work. "Obviously!" you might say, and you'd be right. There is no conflict in recent history where women and girls have not been targeted for sexual violence, whether as a form of torture, as a method to humiliate the enemy, or with a view to spreading terror and despair. If that's not potentially relevant to the protection of international peace and security, what is? But the inclusion of this clause is essential because some members of the Security Council, in particular Russia and China, at times have portrayed rape in war as an issue that doesn't deserve the Council's attention. With the new resolution, they will no longer be able to do so.
  2. The resolution creates a clear mandate for the Security Council to intervene, including through sanctions, where the levels or form of sexual violence merit it. Again, this might seem self-evident. The Security Council is mandated under the UN Charter to address situations that present a threat to international peace and security. It has the power to chastise countries waging war without proper cause -- notably, not in self-defense -- or by illegal methods, such as the use of child soldiers and, indeed, using rape as a weapon of war. Despite this mandate, the Council has so far done little to prevent or punish states for rape in war. In fact, it would seem it at times has consciously avoided doing so. This was, for example, the case during the July 2007 discussions regarding the mandate-renewal for the UN mission in Côte d'Ivoire. Despite having received information regarding intolerably high levels of sexual and gender-based violence in that country, the Council did not empower its field staff to address the violence.

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See more stories tagged with: war, u.n. security council, rape

Marianne Mollmann is Advocacy Director for the Women's Rights Division, which she joined in September 2003 as researcher for Latin America and the Caribbean.

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What the UN does is largely up to us
Posted by: fanny666 on Jul 9, 2008 10:03 AM   
Current rating: 2    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I am SO glad that AlterNet did an article about this! I was beginning to think that "feminism" was more concerned with analyzing Sex And The City than with rape-as-weapon-of-war in places like Sudan and Burma / Mayanmar and Congo.

What the UN does is largely up to us, as citizens of the US. The UN pretty much cannot do anything that the US government does not support. For example, the UN has "solved" the Israel-Palestine conflict repeatedly... but the solutions (UN Resolutions 194 242 338 are simply not implemented because the US does not want them to be.

Sometimes it's more "passive" - like with the UN Resolutions on Sudan where the US is not "opposed" but just doesn't help out as much as we could.

If we want the UN to enforce the notion that rape is a war crime, then we need to pressure our government to make it happen. The UN needs the United States to pay its dues and support its missions with troops and equipment.

This would be a great issue for American feminists to take up. Not to harp on the point, but here are some google results to point out what we've been focusing on:

Feminism "Sex and the City" gets 448,000 websites.

Feminism Rape Sudan gets 290,000

Feminism Rape Burma OR Myanmar gets 117,000

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China and the UN
Posted by: starseed on Jul 9, 2008 3:51 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Why does the security council still exist?

It's an important international body that's rendered completely ineffective merely by virtue of its own permanent member nations.
First, you have the Chinese vetoing anything that might disrupt their ability to crush what little social progress their own country is making or prevent their funding of military dictatorships around the world.

And if you get a vote past them, there's still the US left. And as they keep proving, if it's good for stability, the environment peace or nuclear disarmament, it's almost the de facto response for them to simply veto it rather than alter their own policies to conform.

Or they'll sign the treaty then simply ignore it, knowing full well there isn't a damn thing other nations can do about it except "condemn it in the strongest possible language".

[/offtopic rant]

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When The Face Of Rape Is A White Woman
Posted by: desidid on Jul 9, 2008 6:31 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
the world will rise in outrage. But a country who reveres Thomas Jefferson, who fathered bi-racial children, and wrote that the parents of these children were all unquestionably Black, has never regarded the health and safety of women of color as a priority. And is ill prepared to assign a moral imperative anywhere in the world.

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Raising the awareness of Rape
Posted by: Angela Hayden ART GODDESS on Jul 11, 2008 8:51 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I think this is a good start. Just by stating to the world that rape is a war crime may just enlighten some people that rape really is a crime. And one worthy of prosecution.

Angela Hayden Art Goddes

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