
United Nations & Pentagon
Condone Sex Slavery Oversees:
We have a government that says it doesn’t advocate torture and
yet tries to block a law that would end torture. We have a
government that repeatedly burns lower level minions to wash its
hands of every major scandal that encompasses policies directly
administered by the government itself, as in the case of Abu
Ghraib and the Dyncorp sex scandal.
UN Condones [Halliburton Subsidiary] DynCorp Sex Crimes and Sex Slavery
by DOMINIC HIPKINS
A senior United Nations official is demanding that her
colleagues involved in the sex trade in Bosnia should be
stripped of their immunity and prosecuted.
Madeleine Rees, the UN High Commissioner for Human Rights in
Bosnia, has broken ranks
to demand that UN officials, international peacekeepers and
police who are involved in sex crimes be brought to justice in
their home countries.
Speaking exclusively to Scotland on Sunday, the British lawyer
has also launched an outspoken attack on her former boss. She
accuses Jacques Paul Klein, the former head of the UN Mission in
Bosnia, of not taking UN complicity in the country’s burgeoning
sex trade seriously enough.
In recent years there has been a massive increase in the
trafficking of women in
Bosnia, including girls as young as 12. The women are taken from
their homes in eastern Europe by organised criminal gangs and
brought to Bosnia, where they are forced into prostitution.
The trade in these so-called ‘sex slaves’ hardly existed until
the mid-1990s.
It was fuelled by the arrival of tens of thousands of
predominantly male UN personnel in the wake of the signing of
the Dayton Peace Accord by Bosnia, Croatia and Yugoslavia in
1995.
Rees said: "Visiting brothels where women have been gang-raped
into submission, into slavery, is not part of the UN’s mandate.
"Without an enforceable code of conduct, immunity often means
impunity. We should look at ways of waiving that immunity.
"I would be very happy to see the possibility of prosecutions
for rape or assault in the UK. There is no question this should
happen."
Rees, who has served in Bosnia since 1998, said she had
encountered stiff opposition from
western officials
in her attempts to tackle the trafficking of women.
"They don’t want to know
about it," she said.
"There is this whole ‘boys will be boys’ attitude about men
visiting brothels.
There’s a culture inside the UN where you can’t criticise it.
That goes all the way to the top."
Referring to Klein, she added: "He doesn’t take this issue at
all seriously."
Last year, Rees testified in support of Kathryn Bolkovac, a UN
police officer who was sacked for exposing the sexual abuse of
women and children in Bosnia by her colleagues.
Bolkovac’s former employer DynCorp, an American security firm
which supplied staff to the UN, was forced to pay £110,000 in
compensation.
The chairman of the British employment tribunal which heard the
case described DynCorp as "callous, spiteful and vindictive".
Bolkovac had revealed UN peacekeepers went to nightclubs where
young girls were forced to dance naked and have sex with
customers, and that UN personnel and international aid workers
were linked to prostitution rings in the Balkans. At the time,
Rees described it as "the biggest cover-up I have ever seen",
adding that she believed
30% of those visiting Bosnia’s brothels were UN personnel,
"peacekeepers" or aid workers.
DynCorp insists it has the highest ethical standards of business
"and encourages employees to speak openly".
However, Rees said the private defence contractors, whose
British office is based in Salisbury, should be banned from the
country.
"DynCorp... should not be allowed anywhere near Bosnia," she
said.
In January, a 500 strong European Union police force replaced
the UN’s 1,800 member multinational International Police Task
Force (IPTF).
Dedicated anti-trafficking teams were formed and assigned to
raid nightclubs across Bosnia suspected of operating forced
prostitution rackets.
Rees said the counter-trafficking efforts had mostly been a
failure. "They were basically for show and completely
amateurish," she said.
Referring to the EU police force, Rees added: "They are still
very much on probation.
These men must understand that going into brothels is illegal in
Bosnia. The sex is not consensual if the woman is a 13-year-old
girl trafficked from Moldova."
Although there have been many cases of police officers being
sent home in disgrace for their involvement in the sex trade,
the UN can only remove
them from service and is powerless to prosecute them. It is up
to member countries to take any further action.
Rees said: "People will say the UN is not practicing what it
preaches. It is double standards, and it looks like western
imperialism. Brothel
raids find UN police inside, and then no one is prosecuted. The
UK is prosecuting no one.
"If you send people home, countries get wild. But if you don’t
enforce the rules, you can’t serve in the United Nations."
Human Rights Watch is
equally downbeat in its assessment.
A spokesman for the organisation said: "Foreign nationals
serving in Bosnia enjoy almost complete immunity. It was assumed
countries would prosecute and discipline their citizens upon
their return home from for crimes committed in Bosnia and
Herzegovina. This has rarely happened in practice."
Soldiers from S-FOR, or Stabilisation Force,
Bosnia’s 18,000 strong
Nato-led peacekeeping force, were granted "immunity from
personal arrest or detention" by the November 1995 Dayton Treaty
which authorised their deployment.
S-FOR troops are banned from attending brothels but Rees said
the marketing strategy of suspected new brothels opening near
S-FOR bases makes it clear who they are catering for.
"Outside the Russians’ base, there is a brothel called Odessa,"
she explained. By the Americans’, its Texas or Philadelphia.
There’s even an El Cid near the Spanish base. While there are
foreign troops in Bosnia, there will be always demand for
trafficked women."
Last night, Jan Oskar Solnes, spokesman for the European Union
Police Mission in Bosnia and Herzegovina, said: "Its correct we
have diplomatic immunity, but I imagine any incident [of sexual
misconduct] would be a personal rather than professional matter.
"We have a zero tolerance approach to this issue and anyone
involved will be removed from the mission."
Kirsten Haupt, spokeswoman for the United Nations Liaison Office
(UNLO) in Bosnia, dismissed Rees’s claim that Jacques Paul Klein
had not taken the illegal sex trade seriously.
She said: " All cases have been thoroughly investigated. We have
sent a number of officers home. There is absolutely no
toleration of a ‘boys will be boys’ attitude here."
Klein left Bosnia on February 1 and is no longer working for the
UN. He is understood to be on holiday in the United States, and
could not be contacted by Scotland on Sunday.
Yesterday, a spokesman for DynCorp said: "We do not make it a
practice to comment on opinions.
"However, we are familiar with previous public statements Ms
Rees has made about involuntary servitude and DynCorp continues
to share her concerns for women held against their will in
Bosnia, just as we condemn all human rights abuses anywhere in
the world."
OTHER RELATED
STORIES:
Sins of the peacekeepers
UN forces are supposed to help rebuild war-ravaged communities.
But, as Magin McKenna reports, these workers are also pouring
money into a flourishing trade in illegal brothels, rape and
trafficking in women:
http://www.sundayherald.com/print25914
'Boys will be boys'
It has become a tragic inevitability that whenever international
peacekeepers are sent to bring law and order to a war torn
country, a vast and exploitative sex industry, allegedly follows
close behind:
http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/programmes/correspondent/2043794.stm
UN police accused of involvement in prostitution in Bosnia:
http://www.midhnottsol.org/fow/r034.html
UN Whistleblower Says Fired for Sex Claims:
http://www.globalpolicy.org/security/peacekpg/general/2002/0626sex.htm
Forced Prostitution: UN Police are 'Part of the Problem:
http://k.mihalec.tripod.com/current/UNTrade.htm
Teenagers ´used for sex by UN in Bosnia:
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/main.jhtml?xml=/news/2002/04/25/wbos25.xml&sShee/t=/news/2002/04/25/ixworld.html
A human rights investigator who claims she was sacked for
exposing the sexual abuse of Bosnian women by her United Nations
colleagues, told a tribunal yesterday that girls as young as 15
were offered for sex:
http://www.balkanpeace.org/hed/archive/apr02/hed4913.shtm
Citizens Committee for Restructured Government
www.CCRG.info