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Sudan Tribune

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UN experts urge South Sudan to investigate sexual violence cases

UN Commission on Human Rights in Sudan (from left) Yasmin Sooka, Chair, Andrew Clapham and Barney Afako (2018), by UN Commission on Human Rights in South Sudan (Twitter Photo)

November 28, 2022 (LONDON) – The Government of South Sudan should immediately remove from office and probe governors and county commissioners implicated in rape to show its commitment in tackling sexual violence, United Nations experts advised.

The call came as the UN experts attended the Preventing Sexual Violence Initiative conference in London. Also present was a South Sudan government delegation.

“Nowhere in the world do you find so many women who experience conflict by being repeatedly gang-raped, year after year since 2013, shunned and stigmatized, suffering in silence, while the men responsible are promoted and rewarded,” the Chairperson of the UN Commission on Human Rights in South Sudan, Yasmin Sooka said in a statement.

She added, “It is meaningless for the Government to come up with an array of declarations, national commitments, pledges, and plans if no action is taken against those in high office who are responsible for the repeated violence against women and girls. It is not enough, now and again, to try a handful of junior officers without holding those in command responsible.”

South Sudan, according to the UN experts, has made repeated commitments to tackle sexual violence, nevertheless, being gang raped is still one of the main ways in which women and girls experience the ongoing conflicts, with the vast majority of cases unreported because of fear of rejection by families and communities.

“This year we have seen the most dehumanizing sexual violence in South Sudan for which the Government bears responsibility because of its failure over many years to hold individuals accountable, especially in Unity State where we are dealing with gross and systematic human rights violations amounting to international crimes,” said Commissioner Andrew Clapham.

“South Sudanese are begging the international community to help them in pressuring their leaders to sanction these individuals and remove the people responsible from office.  Tragically victims ask us to speak out and say what they are afraid to say.”

The UN Commission said it has reasonable grounds to believe that earlier this year a government-appointed county commissioner in the oil-rich Unity State was present overseeing systematic gang rapes at a cantonment site.

“This was part of a well-planned scorched earth offensive against civilians in an area considered loyal to the opposition, that involved beheadings, with rape victims being forced to carry the severed heads, victims being burnt alive, and days of brutal sexual assault by up to ten men at a time against young women and girls some as young as 9 years old,” the statement said.

This is not the first-time serious allegations have been labeled against the County Commissioner – the UN Commission earlier published details alleging that he instigated attacks against civilians while a commissioner in 2018 and was briefly put under house arrest, but later reinstated.

Victims in this area experienced attacks in 2013, 2014, 2016, 2018, and now 2022, and complain that lack of criminal accountability has fueled the repeated violence.

“Conflict-related rape and sexual violence in Unity State has become so systematic and is a direct result of impunity; the Commission will engage with the Special Representative of the UN Secretary-General on Conflict-Related Sexual Violence, and the Special Advisor to the UN Secretary-General on the Prevention of Genocide on how to hold perpetrators accountable, building on the 2014 joint communiqué,” said UN Commissioner, Barney Afako.

The UN said that impunity for sexual violence cuts across all the political factions and actors in South Sudan with the opposition appointing as governor of Western Equatoria, a militia leader turned military officer with command responsibility in 2018 for the abduction, rape, torture and sexual slavery of more than 400 women and girls.

“This is in spite of the opposition initiating an investigation into the incident,” the statement said. “Unsurprisingly the newly appointed Governor did nothing to stop a fresh onslaught against civilians that used rape as a weapon of war to forcibly displace populations.”

The UN Commission on Human Rights is mandated by the UN Human Rights Council in Geneva to collect and preserve evidence for use in a future Hybrid Court, the establishment of which has been delayed for many years.

(ST)