‘Rape in war is deliberate military strategy’
June 25th, 2010 - 3:53 pm ICT by IANSWashington, June 25 (IANS) Since the Second World War, the use of rape as a weapon of war has assumed strategic importance and is now a deliberate military strategy, argue researchers.
A study in the Democratic Republic of the Congo found that 16,000 rapes occurred in 2008 alone and in South Kivu province, health centres estimate that 40 women were raped in the region daily.
In the UK, 50-70 percent of female asylum applicants were raped, witnessed rape, or have a credible fear of rape.
The effects of rape and sexual violence during war also extend beyond individual victims and are economically, physically, psychologically and culturally devastating for families and communities, say study authors Coleen Kivlahan, volunteer forensic physician for HealthRight International, and Nate Ewigman from the University of Florida.
For example, in recent conflicts, rape has been used as a reward for victory in battle, a boost to troop morale, as punishment and humiliation for both men and women, to incite revenge in opposing troops, to eliminate or “cleanse” religious or political groups and to destabilise entire communities by creating terror.
Geographical, cultural, religious, political, legal, and behavioural conditions affect the likelihood of the systematic use of rape, explain the authors.
For instance, geographically remote locations allow perpetrators to rape with impunity, while the likelihood that women will be raped, shamed and isolated is increased in cultures with strong traditions regarding virginity, marital fidelity and genital cleanliness.
Religions with strong beliefs about appropriate female clothing and behaviour also increase the risk that women will be falsely accused of adultery and raped as humiliation and punishment, they add.
The international community has mounted a considerable response to the use of rape as a weapon of war, but the authors argue that rape during armed conflict is not simply about military personnel, police or terrorists, said a HealthRight International release.
For example, before 2004, rape assailants in the Democratic Republic of the Congo were primarily affiliated with the military; however, after 2004, civilian rapes increased 17-fold while rapes by armed combatants decreased by 77 percent.
“This pattern suggests a disturbing acceptance of rape among civilians,” they conclude.
“Rape is the result of the lack of dedicated societal attention to the safety, respect, and prosperity of women in peace time as well as in war.”
These findings were published in bmj.com
- UN: Over 8,000 women raped in 2009 during armed conflicts in Congo - Apr 16, 2010
- More than 150 women raped in Congolese village, says UN - Aug 24, 2010
- Over 30 women beaten, raped in Congo on New Year's Day - Jan 07, 2011
- Rebels kill 21 in Congo - Nov 17, 2010
- Three Indian U.N. peacekeepers killed in D.R. Congo attack - Aug 19, 2010
- About 160 women raped per week in Congo: UN - Feb 09, 2010
- No reports of sexual violence by Indian troops in Kashmir: UN - Apr 06, 2011
- 240 victims of mass rape in Congo: UN - Sep 02, 2010
- Army air unit going for Congo UN mission - Sep 06, 2011
- Top official dead, minister hurt in Congo plane crash - Feb 12, 2012
- Sexual violence used as weapon in 31 armed conflicts in 2009 - Apr 17, 2010
- UN sees wartime rape as big challenge - Aug 07, 2010
- UN Security Council condemns rape in Congo - Aug 26, 2010
- Farming, business top US global agenda for women: Envoy - Jul 22, 2011
- Castration for rapist? Many women don't agree - May 03, 2011
Tags: armed conflict, asylum applicants, democratic republic of the congo, health centres, healthright, impunity, marital fidelity, military person, military strategy, political groups, rape as a weapon of war, rapes, recent conflicts, republic of the congo, second world war, sexual violence, south kivu province, study authors, troop morale, university of florida