Nobel Doctor Calls Sexual Violence in Conflict a 'Pandemic'
Voice of America
UNITED NATIONS - Nobel Peace Prize laureate Dr. Denis Mukwege warned Wednesday that the scourge of sexual violence and rape in all conflicts is now "a real pandemic" and without sanctions and justice for the victims these horrific acts won't stop.
The Congolese doctor told the U.N. Security Council in a video briefing that "we are still far away from being able to draw a red line against the use of rape and sexual violence as a strategy of war domination and terror." Mukwege appealed to the international community "to draw a red line against the use of rape and sexual violence as a weapon of war." And he stressed that the "red line" must mean "blacklists with economic, financial and political sanctions as well as judicial prosecutions against the perpetrators and instigators of these egregious crimes." Mukwege founded the Panzi Hospital in the eastern Congo city of Bukavu, and for more than 20 years has treated countless women who were raped amid fighting between armed groups seeking control of some the central African nation's vast mineral wealth. He lamented that sexual violence and impunity continue.FILE - A regional hospital is seen from the street in Bafoussam, Cameroon, Sept. 20, 2021. Officials in the country say doctors are fleeing Cameroon to escape hardship, poor pay, difficult working conditions and unemployment. FILE - Nurses talk with a 13-year-old boy with a gunshot wound as he lies in a hospital bed in Kumba, Cameroon, Oct. 25, 2020.
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