WASHINGTON, D.C. (BNO NEWS) – U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton said that the U.S. was deeply troubled by the reports of mass rapes of women and children in the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC) by the Democratic Forces for the Liberation of Rwanda (FDLR), saying that the horrific attacks undermine peace efforts, the U.S. State Department announced.
She said that the U.S. has repeatedly “condemned the epidemic of sexual violence in conflict zones around the world,” and will continue to speak out for those who can’t speak for themselves. She noted that she helped unanimously adopt UN Resolution 1888 in 2009, which underscored the importance of preventing sexual violence as a weapon of war, especially against civilians.
“Sexual violence harms more than its immediate victims. It denies and destroys our common dignity, it shreds the fabric that weaves us together as humans,” Secretary Clinton commented. She said that the violence endangers family and communities and hinders economic progress in growing countries.
While equality is a far shimmer of a light in DRC, it is only an illusion in many sub communities in the US.
Let's face it. The world is yet to get to a place of treating women as equals to men. Giving voting rights is not the only thing that is needed, it is just a start.
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Democracy needs defending - SOS Hillary Clinton, Sept 8, 2010 Democracy is more than just elections - SOS Hillary Clinton, Oct 28, 2010
The United Nations peacekeeping mission in eastern Congo did not know about a rebel attack and mass rape in that region until more than a week after the events took place, a U.N. peacekeeping mission official said Wednesday.
But the account of the delay was disputed by a non-governmental organization.
Hundreds of Rwandan and Congolese rebels raided a network of villages in North Kivu Province between July 30 and August 3, gang-raping nearly 200 women, humanitarian officials said. A U.N. peacekeeper military base was within 30 kilometers (about 19 miles) of the general area of the attacks, in the town of Kibua.
"We had regular patrols in this area during that period," Madnoje Mounoubai, spokesman for the U.N. peacekeeping mission in the Congo, told CNN by phone from Kinshasa. "Unfortunately, the villagers and the local authorities never brought this issue to our knowledge.
But Margaret Aguirre, an IMC spokeswoman, told CNN that her group informed the U.N.'s Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs about the rapes on August 6.
"Two hundred to four hundred armed men systematically pillaged and raped women in the villages," Giorgio Trombatore, country director for the IMC in the Congo, told CNN. He was among the first group of people to visit the site of the attacks.
"The rebels entered, tried to calm the population down by telling them they came for food and rest, and so [they] shouldn't flee," he continued. "Another group came at night and it was then they started harassing the population."
The rapes, by armed men, often occurred in front of the women's children and husbands, IMC said in a news release. "Large numbers of women reported being physically beaten before the sexual assaults, and some reported abuse of babies who were forcibly removed from their arms. The perpetrators simultaneously pillaged the entire village and smaller neighboring villages, before leaving."
During the four-day attack across 16 villages, according to the U.N., rebels from the Democratic Forces for the Liberation of Rwanda, as well as militiamen from the notorious Mai Mai movement, also looted villages.
An earlier report said three peacekeepers were killed and seven others were wounded, but those deaths and injuries stemmed from a previous incident.
So far, 179 cases of rape have been documented from the days-long event.
U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon condemned the attacks Tuesday, saying he was "outraged."
Ban has dispatched a senior representative -- Atul Khare, his assistant secretary-general for peacekeeping operations -- to the affected areas in and around Walikale, the town that served as the epicenter of the rapes, to meet with victims.
"This is another grave example of both the level of sexual violence and the insecurity that continue to plague the DRC," Ban said in a statement.
Margot Wallstrom, the secretary-general's special representative on sexual violence, was expected to stop in Goma, the capital of North Kivu province, before going on to visit Walikale.
In Washington, State Department Secretary Hillary Clinton said Wednesday she was "deeply concerned" by the reports.
"The United States has repeatedly condemned the epidemic of sexual violence in conflict zones around the world, and we will continue to speak out on this issue for those who cannot speak for themselves," she said in a statement.
"The United States will do everything we can to work with the UN and the DRC government to hold the perpetrators of these acts accountable, and to create a safe environment for women, girls, and all civilians living in the eastern Congo."
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Nobody puts THIS baby in the corner!
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