Special Representative of the Secretary-General on Sexual Violence in Conflict Zainab Hawa Bangura briefs journalists on her recent visit to South Sudan. UN Photo/Eskinder Debebe
20 October 2014 – Sexual violence has become a key feature of the continuing conflict in South Sudan, the United Nations Special Representative of the Secretary-General on Sexual Violence in Conflict, Zainab Hawa Bangura, has declared, while affirming that the widespread use of rape could ultimately be stopped through greater political and legal efforts by the Government and civil society.
In a press conference today at UN Headquarters following her first mission to South Sudan to assess the situation of sexual violence in conflict in the country, Ms. Bangura explained that in her 30 years of experience she had never seen anything like what she witnessed in the northern town of Bentiu, where hundreds of civilians were massacred in April of this year and many more were raped.
According to reports, incidents of sexual violence in Bentiu include rape, gang rape, forced abortion and sexual harassment with perpetrators counting members of the Sudan People’s Liberation Army (SPLA), the South Sudan national police service and more recently, the Justice and Equity Movement (JEM) among their ranks, as they exchanged control over the town at least 8 times.
In addition, she said fighters used the local radio station, Radio Bentiu FM, to broadcast hate speech calling on men to commit sexual violence against women and girls based on their ethnicity and assumed political affiliations.
The Special Representative detailed the nature of the sexual violence that many women are subjected to, emphasizing that those who fight back against their attackers are subsequently “raped with sharp objects instead.” Others, she said, were raped to death. Ms. Bangura also pointed out that a vast number of those who suffer sexual attacks are young, with one of the treated victims only 2 years old.
“It is not just about rape,” Ms. Bangura told the gathered journalists, “it is to inflict unimaginable pain and destruction.”
Ms. Bangura explained that much of the sexual violence had been “commanded” within a military context with attackers ordered to rape women based on their ethnicities. As a result, she noted, structures could be implemented to ensure that such attacks were stopped.
During her visit to South Sudan, which spanned from 5 to 11 October, Ms. Bangura also met with a wide range of representatives from the South Sudanese Government, as well as civil society partners, UN entities and women’s groups.
Her visit concluded with a Joint Communique with the Government that outlines clear steps they will take to prevent and address sexual violence crimes, including issuing and enforcing clear orders through the army chain of command prohibiting sexual violence; provisions to ensure medical, psychosocial and legal assistance to victims; security and justice sector reform; and ensuring that sexual violence crimes are addressed explicitly in the peace process.
If a State cannot respect women during times of peace, it cannot protect them during conflict, Ms. Bangura continued, while warning that “widespread sexual violence sows the seeds for the poisoned fruits of reprisal.”
In a similarly toned op-ed published in local Sudanese papers, the Special Representative called to all South Sudanese stakeholders, declaring that the time had come for the country to ask whether it wanted “a future with enmity between neighbours and ethnic tensions among citizens, or a future of peace and security with neighbours of all ethnicities working side by side to help the country reach its full potential.”
“South Sudan is now at a crossroads,” wrote Ms. Bangura, “it can turn back from sexual violence and reject its use as a political tool and weapon of war, or it can continue on a road whose only destination is revenge, and the decimation of a whole country’s hopes for a better future.”