Thank you very much indeed.
Thank you for inviting me to speak to you about sexual violence in conflict zones and about the role that Canada can play to minimize its devastating consequences, particularly its impact on women and children.
The organization that I head, International Crisis Group, is committed to preventing and resolving armed conflict. Our analyses and recommendations are based on an on-the-ground presence in 27 countries and cover some 60 countries and territories affected or threatened by conflict.
I don't want to make generalizations about a reality that manifests itself differently in every context, but it is safe to say that civilian populations tend to be unstable in countries in which the rule of law is largely absent. Not surprisingly, this is very often the case in countries at war or recovering from a crisis.
I will illustrate my points with examples from Haiti, Sudan and Afghanistan, as Canada has a special role in these three countries. I would like to emphasize once again that, while sexual violence plays out differently in each case, sexual violence is nearly always a hidden by-product of war, just as it is often overlooked in peace time by countries whose cultures either deny its existence or tolerate it.
This presents a grave challenge for international efforts to eradicate sexual violence as a byproduct of war. Just over 10 years ago, the Security Council of the United Nations adopted what was meant to be a landmark, resolution 1325, and the last two years have seen some developments related to its implementation and, indeed, additional resolutions. However, 10 years after the initial Security Council initiative, in my view it has yielded so little progress on the ground that there are causes for questioning whether the whole thrust of that doctrine is sound.
I’m sure you’re familiar with the overall situation in Haiti. For women and girls in the tent cities in Port-au-Prince, Security Council resolutions must seem very remote. Sexual violence was pervasive in Haiti even before the earthquake and the subsequent humanitarian disaster, as the rule of law was weak and years of development efforts failed to construct a functioning criminal justice system. The crisis has further increased the vulnerability of many women and girls. Data are unreliable, but widespread abuse and rape have been reported in the 1,200 to 1,300 IDP camps in the capital, which house over one million residents.
In Sudan, rape has long been identified as a weapon of war in Darfur. The Darfur peace negotiations led to a comparative lull in overall violence over the past few years, but clashes that did continue between the government and various rebel factions have been accompanied by cases of rape, gang rape, and other physical assaults thought to be carried out by all sides. The last couple of months, with the eyes of the international community on the south's referendum, have seen an escalation of violence in Darfur. Humanitarian agencies have been denied access to areas between the north and south of Darfur, and IDP populations, especially women and children, are thought to be particularly vulnerable.
The situation in Sudan is aggravated by the systematic denial by the government of the extent and even the existence of widespread sexual violence. The government is prone to accuse international NGOs of fabricating a problem that they then use to obtain funding from their western donors, for whom this is a popular cause.
In South Sudan, despite the Comprehensive Peace Agreement between the north and the south and the jubilation around the landmark referendum, one recent study has suggested that women continue to suffer rape and other forms of gender-based violence. Sexual violence is carried out with impunity by the police and armed forces, since soldiers feel a sense of entitlement as liberators above the law. Intercommunal violence, such as the deadly attacks in Jonglei in March and April of 2009 on which the International Crisis Group has reported, now appears to include the specific targeting of women and children.
In Afghanistan, the government and its international backers struggle to meet many of its citizens' rights and needs, but the failure to ensure the equal rights enshrined for women and girls in the Afghan Constitution, not to mention the Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination against Women, to which the country is party, is especially stark. These shortfalls can't be scrubbed away by reference to Afghan cultural norms. They should be seen in the context of an American-led international intervention, in which justice and meaningful efforts to build rule-of-law institutions have been largely absent.
The pervasive impunity in Afghanistan is a major driver of support for the insurgency. It also underlies the widespread sexual violence against both women and girls--about 85% of which is purportedly carried out by family members--or against young boys, an important but under-reported practice perpetrated as much by pro-government militias, nominally the West's allies, as by insurgents.
A lack of political will, together with discrimination against women in both the formal and informal justice systems, reinforces the impunity and entrenches cultural attitudes and abusive practices that deny women their rights, including protection against sexual violence.
In Haiti, Sudan, and Afghanistan, as well as in the eastern provinces of the Democratic Republic of Congo, entrenched patterns of abuse against women intersect with newer trends emerging from social breakdown associated with armed conflict.
The tendency, especially on the part of donors, to outsource work linked to sexual violence to civil society or to humanitarian actors is understandable in the face of governments' reluctance to tackle sexual violence, and in the case of Darfur and the DRC, even the state itself is implicated. However, law enforcement and justice are basic public goods, and therefore they are the preserve of state actors. The extent to which they can be contracted out to civil society groups is limited.
NGOs can open clinics but not courts. While civil society groups or peacekeepers might be able to provide short-term protection and assistance to victims, their work must be complemented by longer-term development of state capacity to prevent sexual violence and to punish perpetrators. This is, of course, part and parcel of a larger effort at building state institutions in the justice sector, broadly defined.
But efforts at protection are not enough, at least not as presently configured. Conflict is, of course, about power. Whatever its root causes and its innumerable contextual complexities, virtually every deadly conflict relates to power--how it's controlled and how it's distributed.
Understanding the particular vulnerability and victimization of women, especially in the grossest cases--life under a compulsory burka, or brutal rape by militias in the DRC--is not that hard, but rather than assuming that they need protection, which is already a paternalistic attitude, and then failing miserably to protect them, why not draw the more obvious conclusion, which is that women need to protect themselves, and then help them get on with that?
It's not an unreasonable assumption that if we were to put as much money directly into the hands of women in war zones--not just microcredits, but the kinds of resources that flow freely to the military, for example--that kind of funding would help secure for women a real seat at the table in peace talks and ensure that they became powerful enough to protect themselves and their children.
It's often said that international assistance is inevitably a reflection of a society's domestic policies. The greatest impetus for the protection of women in Canada from sexual and gender-based violence came from the full legal empowerment of women as equal citizens in the 1982 Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms and in the federal government court challenges program, which allowed women to take charge of the issues that affected them and to seek, by themselves and for themselves, just and fair solutions.
Transposed to the international scene, Canada can champion the empowerment of women in war-torn countries by helping to build credible institutions of governance--parliaments, courts--and, in parallel, by giving women directly the means to advance their own interests. I believe the development of a country-tailored program that would reflect that policy line would stand a real chance of having an impact.
Thank you once again for inviting me to speak today. I am sorry that I was unable to join you in person. I am in Brussels, where it is raining, but rest assured that I am available to answer any questions you may have for me.
Thank you very much.