UN announces plan to create high-level task force on sexual exploitation and abuse News
UN announces plan to create high-level task force on sexual exploitation and abuse

The UN announced [UN News Centre report] plans on Friday to create a high-level task force to prevent and respond to sexual exploitation and abuse. The task force is to develop a “clear, game-changing strategy to achieve visible and measurable further improvement.” It will include members who currently hold various positions throughout the UN. One member, Jane Hall Lute, is the UN special coordinator for improving the UN’s response to sexual exploitation and abuse. The UN’s sexual exploitation and abuse policy were established [UN policy] due to allegations of sexual exploitation and abuse being committed by UN peacekeepers against the individuals they were sent to aid. Jane Hall Lute had given an interview [UN interview] in July describing what the UN has been doing to reduce the sexual exploitation and abuse committed by UN peacekeepers. The strategy of the task force will be presented in an upcoming Report of the Secretary-General on Special Measures for Protection from Sexual Exploitation.

The allegations of sexual exploitation and abuse by UN peacekeepers and troops have been an ongoing issue for the UN. Three UN peacekeepers went on trial [JURIST report] in the Democratic Republic of the Congo in April over allegations of rape and attempted rape of minors. In March the UN High Commissioner for Human Rights sought [JURIST report] an investigation in allegations of abuses committed by UN and French troops in Central African Republic. In August 2015, the head of the peacekeeping mission in Central African Republic resigned [JURIST report] over reports of sexual exploitation by its members in the country. In June 2015 a report [JURIST report] found that some UN peacekeepers in Haiti sexually exploited more than 200 Haitian women.