United Nations—The boys said they approached the French soldiers because they were hungry. Some were so young that they didn’t quite understand the acts the soldiers demanded in return. One boy, 8 or 9 years old, said he did it several times to the same soldier, “until, one day, an older kid saw him and told him what he was doing was bad.”
Another boy, 9, said he thought the soldiers had been urinating.
United Nations investigators heard such stories of sexual abuse from several boys in May and June 2014 in Central African Republic, where French soldiers were protecting a sprawling displaced persons camp in the conflict-torn capital, Bangui.
One year later, revelations about how the United Nations (UN) handled the boys’ accounts have horrified people both inside and outside the world body. Statements marked “strictly confidential” have shown that its top human rights officials failed to follow up for several months on the allegations their own office had collected.
No arrests have been announced, and it’s not clear where the accused soldiers, who were supporting a UN peacekeeping force, are now. The UN seems unable to say when the abuses stopped, or how long it continued to investigate.
On Friday, more documents were released by a non-governmental organization run by two former UN staffers that’s calling for an independent investigation into the case. The documents show UN officials scrambling not so much to help a French inquiry into the allegations but to investigate the human rights staffer who told French authorities in the first place.
A separate report with the children’s allegations, obtained by the Associated Press, says the first account was heard May 19 by a human rights staffer and a United Nations Children’s Fund (Unicef) child protection officer. The interviews continued through June 24. A Geneva-based human rights staffer shared the report with French authorities in July.
The boys’ accounts are simple and stark. An 11-year-old said he had gone “looking for empty wrappings to play with” when a French soldier first called him over, later giving the boy food and a little money in exchange for oral sex. Another boy, 9, “had been severely beaten by his mother when he told her what had happened.”
A Unicef spokeswoman did not immediately respond to questions on Friday about how the children’s agency reported the allegations, and to whom.
The case has exposed a glaring weakness in a world body that considers human rights one of its three main pillars: It has no specific guidelines on how to handle allegations of child sexual abuse, and no requirement for immediate, mandatory reporting.
Even when French gendarmes showed up at the UN peacekeeping mission in Bangui to investigate the allegations—the report shared with French authorities is on the mission’s letterhead—they were told they had to go through proper UN channels and talk to the human rights office in Geneva instead.
That was in August. At the end of March, the UN finally handed France a redacted copy of the same report they already had. The UN says the report first given to the French included the names of the children and witnesses and was a breach of protocol.
The children’s allegations didn’t make their way to top officials at UN headquarters in New York for months. On Friday UN peacekeeping chief Herve Ladsous told reporters he first heard about them this spring. When asked why the mission in Central African Republic didn’t alert his office in New York right away, he said, “Some reporting lines maybe didn’t function.”
The nongovernmental organization that released on Friday internal UN documents related to the case, AIDS-Free World, called for an independent investigation into the way the allegations were handled from the start.
“The grim reality is that those with experience within the UN system are unlikely to be surprised,” its statement said. “They know that this is not an unusual case; it is simply one that has come, partially, to light.” AP
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