Security Council strengthens efforts to end impunity for conflict-related sexual violence
UN News Centre | 24 June 2013
Also addressing the debate was actress and activist Angelina Jolie, the Special Envoy of the UN High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR), who emphasized that tackling war-zone sexual violence is the Council’s responsibility, as well as the duty of Governments in countries affected by it. And when Governments cannot act, the Council must step in and provide leadership and assistance.“I understand that there are many things that are difficult for the UN Security Council to agree on. But sexual violence in conflict should be not be one of them,” she said. “That it is a crime to rape young children is not something I imagine anyone in this room would not be able to agree on.”
Security Council strengthens efforts to end impunity for conflict-related sexual violence
24 June 2013 – The Security Council today sent a strong signal to
perpetrators of sexual violence in conflict that their crimes will not
be tolerated, adopting a new resolution to strengthen efforts to end
impunity for a scourge that affects not only large numbers of women and
girls but also men and boys.
In three previous resolutions – 1820 (2008), 1888 (2009) and 1960 (2010)
– the Council affirmed that sexual violence, when committed
systematically and used as a tool of war, is a fundamental threat to
international peace and security, requiring an operational security and
judicial response.
During a debate on women and peace and security, the 15-member body
today unanimously adopted resolution 2106, by which it emphasized more
consistent and rigorous investigation and prosecution of sexual violence
crimes as a central aspect of deterrence, and ultimately prevention.
It emphasized that “effective steps to prevent and respond to such acts
significantly contribute to the maintenance of international peace and
security; and stresses women’s participation as essential to any
prevention and protection response…”
The Council recognized the need for “more timely, objective, accurate
and reliable information” as a basis for prevention and response, and
requested Secretary-General Ban
Ki-moon and relevant United Nations entities to speed up the
establishment of monitoring, analysis and reporting arrangements on
conflict-related sexual violence.
“Sexual violence, whenever and wherever it occurs, is a vile crime. It
must be exposed and met with the anger and action that it deserves,” Mr.
Ban said
at the outset of the meeting, stressing that those who hold power and
influence have a special duty to step forward and be part of a global
coalition of champions determined to break this “evil.”
He recalled his recent visit to the Democratic Republic of the Congo
(DRC), where he met women and girls who had been raped and maimed by
armed groups on all sides of the conflict. While there are hospitals
there to help these women, they cannot protect them, he said. “That is a
job for the Congolese authorities and the international community, in
particular this Council.”
The Secretary-General’s Special Representative on Sexual Violence in
Conflict, Zainab Hawa Bangura, noted that today, it is still largely
“cost-free” to rape a woman, child or man in conflict. “But for the
first time in history, we can reverse this reality. It will require
leadership and political courage, and a relentless determination to
match the cold, calculating brutality of those who would rape the
innocent for military or political gain.”
She lauded today’s resolution, saying it reinforces a compliance-based regime based on reliable and timely information and analysis, and on the actions that must be taken at the political, strategic and tactical levels on the basis of such information.
“The resolve of this Council and the international community as a whole
has set us firmly on the path of accountability and prevention,” she
said. “We must stay the course, until we achieve the ‘critical mass’ of
action that will turn the tide on history’s oldest and least condemned
crime.”
The meeting, which is expected to hear from over 60 speakers, including
several senior Government ministers, is being chaired by William Hague,
Secretary of State for Foreign and Commonwealth Affairs of the United
Kingdom, which holds the Council’s rotating presidency this month.
Mr. Hague, speaking in his national capacity, warned that if the
international community does not address the culture of impunity
surrounding conflict-related sexual violence, millions more women,
children and men could well be subjected to the same appalling treatment
now and in the conflicts of the future.
“The lead we set and the action we take, therefore, have the potential
to save lives and change the course of events around the world, and
nothing less than that should be our ambition… Together, it is time to
say that rape and sexual violence used as a weapon of war is
unacceptable, that we know that it can be prevented, and that we will
act now to eradicate it…”
Also addressing the debate was actress and activist Angelina Jolie, the Special Envoy of the UN High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR),
who emphasized that tackling war-zone sexual violence is the Council’s
responsibility, as well as the duty of Governments in countries affected
by it. And when Governments cannot act, the Council must step in and
provide leadership and assistance.
“I understand that there are many things that are difficult for the UN
Security Council to agree on. But sexual violence in conflict should be
not be one of them,” she said. “That it is a crime to rape young
children is not something I imagine anyone in this room would not be
able to agree on.”
What was needed, she emphasized, was political will. Every country in
the world is affected by sexual violence, and all countries have a
responsibility to step forward. “But the starting point must be you, the
UN Security Council – shouldering your responsibilities and showing
leadership… If the Security Council sets rape and sexual violence in
conflict as a priority, it will become one and progress will be made. If
you do not, this horror will continue.”
Speaking from her experience as a lawyer and activist working to bring
justice to victims of sexual violence in conflict, Jane Adong Anywar of
the Women’s Initiatives for Gender Justice said that leadership on
accountability for conflict-related crimes, including sexual violence,
must be provided at the national level, with priority given to
resourcing; adequate legislation prohibiting acts of sexual violence;
and capacity building for police, investigators, lawyers and judges
regarding the adjudication of these crimes.
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