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By Haider Rizvi
12/02/2006
Click here to read the entire article.
Below is an excerpt of an article from One World:
United Nations welcomed the world body's decision to call a high-level meeting next week to address the issue of sexual abuse against children by its peacekeepers.
"We believe that there's definitely a commitment on a high level," said Joel Charny, vice president for policy at Refugees International, a Washington, DC-based independent group.
Refugees International and 24 other non-governmental organizations (NGOs) are likely to participate in the high-level meeting at UN headquarters in New York Monday.
UN officials told OneWorld that the outgoing UN chief Kofi Annan decided to convene the session because allegations of sexual abuses continued even after the UN had taken strict measures to curb such incidents.
Earlier this week, the British Broadcasting Corporation (BBC) reported that UN soldiers stationed in Haiti and Liberia were subjecting children to rape and prostitution.
UN officials said they were unable to confirm whether such cases actually took place in those two countries, but added that even one case of sexual abuse was "one case too many."
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Despite the "zero tolerance" policy, however, about 80 percent of some 100,000 people involved in peacekeeping worldwide cannot be disciplined by the UN, said an official.
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UN and NGOs Commit to Eliminating Sexual Abuse by All International Agency Personnel
Daily Telegraph: UN to hold inquiry into Sudan child abuse
BBC News: UN Troops Face Child Abuse claims
Must Boys Be Boys? Ending Sexual Exploitation & Abuse in UN Peacekeeping Missions
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