Margot Wallstrom visited the Democratic Republic of Congo last week to hear first hand testimony from witnesses and victims of abuses
The special representative on sexual violence in conflict, Margot Wallstrom, said UN peacekeepers there had information suggesting soldiers had committed such abuses.
The alleged attacks are said to have occurred in the same place where rebels carried out mass rapes just weeks ago.
Ms Wallstrom welcomed the recent arrests of two rebel leaders, saying this should serve as a warning that sexual violence would not be tolerated.
Source:BBC
The alleged attacks are said to have occurred in the same place where rebels carried out mass rapes just weeks ago.
- Ms Wallstrom urged the government to investigate the allegations. She was briefing the Security Council on her visit to North Kivu province.
- After the mass rapes in July and August came to light, UN peacekeepers based just 20 miles (32km) away were criticised for not responding quickly enough.
- Around 300 civilians and more than 50 children in the Walikale region were raped by the rebels - many of them in front of their families and neighbours.
- Ms Wallstrom blamed the rebel Democratic Forces for the Liberation of Rwanda (FDLR) and Mai-Mai militia.
- The attacks had focussed international attention on the endemic sexual violence in Congo and UN failures to deal with it.
- Since then, Ms Wallstrom said government troops (FARDC) had been deployed to the territory to reassert control and to implement the president's moratorium on mining in the area, which is rich in minerals.
- The UN special representative heard directly from locals on her visit last week and said UN peacekeepers in the area had also told her of rapes, killings and lootings perpetrated recently by government soldiers.
- She urged the DRC government to investigate the new attacks and "swiftly hold any perpetrators to account".
- "The possibility that the same communities that were brutalised in July and August are now also suffering exactions at the hands of the FARDC troops is unimaginable and unacceptable," she said.
- The BBC's United Nations correspondent, Barbara Plett, says Ms Wallstrom's warning underlines the enormous difficulty of protecting civilians in a region overrun by rebel groups, with an army made up of former militias.
Ms Wallstrom welcomed the recent arrests of two rebel leaders, saying this should serve as a warning that sexual violence would not be tolerated.
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