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Sudan Tribune

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Sudan calls alleged U.N. sex abuse “outrageous”

Jan 4, 2007 (KHARTOUM) — Sudan on Thursday described the alleged sexual abuse of children by U.N. peacekeepers in south Sudan as “outrageous” and said it would launch its own investigation into the affair.

The United Nations said on Wednesday it was investigating 13 cases of serious misconduct including sexual abuse and exploitation in south Sudan.

Britain’s Daily Telegraph newspaper said on Wednesday that U.N. peacekeepers and civilian staff were raping and abusing children as young as 12 in southern Sudan. The paper said it had interviewed 20 young victims in the south Sudan capital Juba.

“We are very concerned. It is outrageous,” foreign ministry spokesman Ali al-Sadig told Reuters.

“If anyone has committed such crimes they should face the full weight of the law,” he added.

He said the Khartoum government would launch an investigation into the matter. Any U.N. personnel found guilty of such crimes would be dealt with by the United Nations and not under Sudanese law.

More than 11,000 U.N. police and troops are in Sudan to monitor a north-south peace deal, which will mark its second anniversary next week.

Sudan’s north-south civil war, Africa’s longest, ended in January 2005 with a peace deal which paved the way for democratic transformation, power and wealth sharing. The U.N. peacekeepers are there to monitor implementation of the deal.

U.N. spokesman George Somerwill said the United Nations would be meeting on Thursday with the government of southern Sudan. He said the United Nations took these kinds of allegations “very, very seriously indeed”.

The allegations are likely to further hamper efforts by new U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-Moon to deploy U.N. peacekeepers to Sudan’s western Darfur region, where a separate four-year-old conflict has killed an estimated 200,000 and driven 2.5 million from their homes.

Khartoum rejects a U.N. resolution authorising 22,500 U.N. troops and police to deploy to Darfur to take over from the struggling African Union force, likening it to a Western invasion and an attempt at colonisation.

Asked if the sex abuse allegations would affect Khartoum’s decision on allowing U.N. troops in Darfur, al Sadig said: “This is exactly why we are so concerned.”

(Reuters)

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