[Translation]
Members of Parliament, good afternoon.
[English]
I am pleased to testify before you today to discuss the issue of sexual violence against women and children in fragile states and in conflict situations. l would like to share with you several observations made during a recent visit to the Democratic Republic of the Congo.
I will also take this opportunity to present, in my role as research analyst with the Pearson Peacekeeping Centre, a number of recommendations to strengthen efforts to prevent and respond to sexual violence in conflict and post-conflict situations.
My presentation will be in French; however, it will be my pleasure to respond to questions in both languages.
[Translation]
As I just mentioned, I represent the Pearson Peacekeeping Centre, a non-governmental organization whose mandate is to improve the effectiveness of peacekeeping operations through research, education, training and capacity-building.
The centre sensitizes police and military staff to sexual assault and sexual assault prevention in situations of conflict and post-conflict through various training courses, seminars and round tables.
One of the first objectives of our visit to the DRC was to study in greater depth the various aspects of the specific priorities of the UN mission in the DRC, MONUC, in particular the protection of civilians and the fight against sexual assault, in order to better design and plan our programs and to gather useful information for the purpose of developing our courses.
Sexual assault is not a situation specific to countries in a situation of conflict or post-conflict. Cases of violence are, of course, found all around the world. What differentiates this violence from what is found in armed conflicts, and more specifically in the DRC, is the permanent mark it leaves not only on its victims, but also on entire communities.
War- related violence is the most pernicious of all. Its purpose is to destroy, to humiliate families and to disperse populations. Its perpetrators are merciless, going so far as to cut off women's breasts with machetes and mutilate their genitals with broken bottles or firearms. Even worse, if that's possible, this violence does not just affect its victims; the stigmatization is such that their families and communities suffer as well.
According to UN Action Against Sexual Violence in Conflict, as many as 500,000 women were raped during the genocide in Rwanda, more than 64,000 in the conflict in Sierra Leone and more than 40,000 in the war in Bosnia-Herzegovina.
In 2009, it is estimated that more than 15,000 women were raped in eastern DRC. In Darfur, approximately 100 women are raped every day. That is hard to believe, but it's a fact.
It is in these circumstances that UN Security Council Resolution 1820, which was adopted in 2008, denounces the use of rape and sexual violence as weapons of war in armed conflicts.
That resolution, which is further to Resolution 1325 on Women, Peace and Security, goes so far as to acknowledge that systematic sexual violence against women in situations of conflict is not only an attack on the dignity and human rights of women, but also constitutes a war crime and a crime against humanity.
Despite these resolutions and numerous international efforts, the greatest injustice is the impunity enjoyed by the perpetrators of rape and sexual crimes. In situations of conflict, the vast majority of attackers go unpunished.
More recently, in July 2010, some 200 rebels invaded the Walikale region in the province of North Kivu, in DRC. They pillaged the area and raped more than 300 women and young girls over three days, in an undeniable use of sexual assault on the vulnerable population.
The international community reacted quickly, deploring MONUC's failure to take action in response to the attacks and demanding a greater effort on the part of the mission to protect civilians.
The question arises: could these deplorable incidents have been prevented? Opinions vary. Some say that military observers could more readily have perceived the signs of violence and prevented the attack merely by being there. Others claim that the mission should have used force and attacked the attackers. For others still, the mission could not have prevented the incident in spite of its efforts.
Wanting to blame MONUC is understandable. After all, the purpose of the mission is to protect civilians.
However, as a member of the international community, we have to consider the following question: do our expectations exceed what the mission can accomplish with its human and financial resources?
The sensationalist media find it hard to mention that the 30 military observers might not have been able to confront the 200 rebels.
Particularly since it can take 20 to 30 minutes to cover a distance of 30 kilometers in North America or Europe, whereas, in the Congo, that can take two or three days in a 4 x 4. That is in addition to the absence of any communication system, more particularly in the remote villages.
In view of these circumstances, is it MONUC's responsibility to protect all individuals at all times, wherever they may be? This is an unavoidable debate and it will last as long as the insecurity remains and national security institutions are unable to fully protect civilian populations across the country. It is important to bear in mind that the UN's mission in the DRC is not an executive mandate. In other words, the UN's responsibility is to support the DRC government's efforts to combat impunity and to protect civilians from violations of international humanitarian law and human rights.
There is no quick and easy solution. It is interesting to watch MONUC's numerous initiatives to create and improve ties with the communities and to sensitize senior leaders of the countries concerned to the problem of sexual violence. Despite its extent, it is difficult to identify any impact in the context of a conflict in which armed rebel groups use sexual violence as a weapon of war and where impunity reigns. Prevention is necessarily one of the best ways to combat sexual violence. For example, one of the deficiencies identified during our visit was a lack of communication between military forces and UN police and the local communities. Communication is a critical factor in any preventive strategy as it permits a better understanding of the local situation and of alarm signals.
Deploying a larger number of female police officers and military members is another prevention strategy. For example, female staff can facilitate access to local women, improve support for their needs and thus help increase the sense of safety among the local populations. In addition, as women often represent more than half of the adult population of a specific society, it seems logical that, in the context of a peace operation, an attempt should be made to achieve some balance between men and women in staffing positions. However, prevention cannot be carried out without a security and judicial system that the public can trust and that puts an end to impunity for violence against women, whether it is committed by civilians, militia members or soldiers. The security system cannot be reformed without the political will and determination of the players concerned.
During her visit to DRC last April, Michaëlle Jean, Canada's former Governor General and Commander in Chief, said: "By giving women these means, we are giving the families, communities and countries to which they belong the opportunity to live a better, fairer life." It is important to note that sexual violence prevents women from even taking part in their society, a condition that was identified by Resolution 1325 as an essential factor in achieving sustainable peace. Implementing the national action plan on UN Security Council Resolution 1325 is another strategy for combatting sexual assault by implementing and monitoring the various indicators.
Lastly, it is also important to note the role of donors in combatting sexual violence. Despite their good intentions, we often see that donors lack an understanding of the situation. It is important that they adopt a holistic approach to ensure that entire communities receive funds while meeting the specific needs of the victims of sexual violence.
If this visit taught us one thing, it is that MONUC's ongoing work and efforts, together with those of the humanitarian agencies and organizations in the field and the national players concerned, are essential in combatting sexual violence. However, more effort is and will be necessary in future. In the short term, it is important that the assessment of current situations help determine development and investment actions that will have a concrete effect in the field.
I would like to conclude by citing Ms. Marie-Jacqueline Kumbu, from DRC's department of gender, the family and children: "Evil strikes suddenly but dissipates slowly." It is thanks to the contained and concerted efforts of the international community that we can hope for an improvement in the situation of women and children enduring situations of conflict.
Thank you for your attention. I will be pleased to answer your questions.
:
Good afternoon, ladies and gentlemen. I would like to thank you for this invitation to appear today and for this opportunity to present and address a subject of enormous importance: the issue of sexual violence against women and children in fragile states and situations of conflict.
As my colleague, Ms. St-Pierre, has presented her evidence in French, I will be making my presentation in English. However, I am prepared to answer your questions in French or English following our presentations.
[English]
As you well know, sexual violence in conflict zones in Africa is both a complex problem and a subject both of western preoccupation and of inaction. As you no doubt also know, over the last 15 years, a number of conflicts--Rwanda, Darfur, South Sudan, Sierra Leone, the DRC--have become synonymous with large-scale incidences of rape and sexual violence, combined with other acts of brutality. While the targets of sexual violence include men, women and children have been the primary victims.
In the context of the DRC, it is estimated that hundreds of thousands--possibly close to half a million--women and girls of all ages have been raped in the past 13 years of war. The acts themselves are often extremely brutal in nature, and deliberately so. Women and girls are also susceptible to repeated attacks, sometimes leaving them to suffer permanent physical and psychosocial injuries.
I would like to focus my time here today on the outcomes of three initiatives that l've led or co-led in my capacity as coordinator of the POWER project, in my former capacity as deputy director of Peacebuild, and in cooperation with other institutes and networks, such as Carleton University's institute of African studies and the international Publish What You Pay coalition.
Funded by the Law Foundation of Ontario, the POWER project is housed at the University of Ottawa's human rights research and education centre. It is a project that seeks to advance women's and girls' equality rights in Africa, and our focus is on sexual violence against women and girls in the Great Lakes region there.
Among the many initiatives we have sponsored, three workshops were held in which speakers from various conflict/post-conflict regions in Africa were represented. These bilingual workshops, which involved over 130 participants in all, examined the phenomenon of sexual violence and conflict. The first looked at causes, consequences, and possible solutions. The second looked at the experiences and the provision of support services to survivors from Africa now residing in Canada. The third examined the gendered dimensions of the activities of the mining sector in conflict situations in Africa.
Drawing on these three initiatives in particular, l've tried to distill what was discussed by workshop participants in order to share with you today general findings and recommendations.
In macro terms, the findings ultimately reflect a broader discussion of power and security, and by security I mean both human security and hard security. The emphasis on so-called hard security is an important starting point. It is important to state from the outset that this is not a women's issue. It is often dismissed as such and so tends not to garner the political will and/or the resources it deserves or requires for effective action.
This is a hard-security issue. Clearly, gendered violence destroys the lives of individuals, but it also unravels entire communities. The capacity of communities to maintain stability and address and minimize local conflict are negatively affected, which has regional and national implications for consolidating peace.
Within this broader discussion of power and security, the first of three overarching themes emanating from these workshops relates to the threat of simplification. The absence of a nuanced understanding of the phenomenon, which takes into consideration local dimensions of conflict, can lead to actions that have unintended consequences, however well-meaning.
We risk overlooking local power dynamics and tensions that undermine peace-building efforts, including efforts to put an end to violence against women and girls. We risk overlooking the power of local community and local civil society, and by doing so we contribute to their disempowerment and fracturing. Local actors know what needs to be done, but their voices fall on deaf ears, since it is often not what donors want to hear, doesn't fit within their prevailing analysis of conflict, and/or doesn't fall within their list of priorities.
A second overarching theme that emerged from the workshops was that if we need a bottom-up approach, we also need to link local phenomenon to the broader context and to larger, structural power dynamics. This requires that we critically reflect on our role and the impact of our actions as donors, humanitarian actors, consumers and private sector actors, and that we take action based on this critical reflection.
The workshop participants called for linkages to broader phenomenon, including transnational actions and dynamics, that set the stage for violence and its perpetuation. This means that we have to stop seeing rape as a natural occurrence in conflict or as naturally characteristic of some societies. Rather, rape and extreme gender-based violence emerge out of specific political and economic contexts and serve the interests of those who benefit from protracted instability.
In the Great Lakes region, protracted chaos is anchored in licit and illicit global markets. Local natural resources are highly lucrative. Easy access to these materials relies on fractured communities and the desperation of local residents who, for example, are willing to become diggers to survive—and this includes children. Revenues are, in large part, used to purchase and fuel the market and trade in small arms and light weapons. So in this context, criminality, violence, and the struggle for survival are normalized, rendering women, girls, and children particularly vulnerable.
In light of these dynamics, we need to closely examine the role of our private sector and its role and impact in fragile states, and we need to do so with a gendered lens.
But workshop participants were also critical of donors, funding agencies, and NGOs. While foreign interventions were called for, they acknowledged that donors were sometimes caught up in perpetuating larger and largely negative dynamics and structures of power.
For example, the multi-level channeling of funds, most often via UN agencies or international bodies, amounts to the creation of a very top-down structure, by which the execution of various contracting agreements are filtered through. The more layers, generally, the more disconnected with and less responsive to local needs; moreover, the needs of the executing agencies, donors, and NGOs are felt to be privileged above those of the communities and populations that are most vulnerable.
A third overarching theme emerging from the workshops relates to issues of voice and representation. We need to recognize Africans, and African girls and women in particular, as actors in their own right and, in fact, as experts of their own condition. We need to amplify their voices and support their protection and peace-building efforts. We need to validate their research efforts and recognize local forms of knowledge.
Countless donor-driven programs have portrayed women and girls as victims and have simply dismissed their views. In fact, some African participants in our workshops and others have said that foreign donors and NGOs are greatly mistrusted, and increasingly so.
Congolese women and local organizations are increasingly reluctant to cooperate. They often refuse to share their research and local data or to provide input because they have been consulted in the past and since forgotten, or because there's no evidence that their views have been taken into consideration.
Local research and information have been used, appropriated, and even misrepresented or used to justify programs or projects that weren't locally supported. There is a pervasive and growing sense that disregard for their own views and experiences and foreign control over their data and personal information have contributed to their disempowerment.
In the time remaining, I would like to present three sets of recommendations based, in part, on these workshop themes I have spelled out:
First, we need to rethink how we frame or approach the issue. It's a security issue, not a women's problem.
We need to acknowledge the complexity of the issue and tackle it, starting from the bottom up, to improve our analysis of the intersections of the local and the global.
We need to put ourselves back into the equation, critically examining our role as donors and aid actors, and as consumers of prized goods extracted from conflict zones, and via careful consideration and ongoing monitoring of the impact of our private sectors in these regions.
Here I would like to draw your attention to the fact that Madame St-Pierre made reference to the national action plan on women, peace, and security, which was very welcome, but there was no mention whatsoever of the private sector in that plan.
We need to change the prevailing discourse and modes of analysis, moving away from dominant top-down policy and programming approaches. Here, our research and scholarly work on conflict and war economies needs to bring in gender and gender analysis, which has been largely left out up until now. But gender is also left out of Canada's foreign policy, quite literally.
Again, with reference to the national action plan on women, peace, and security, there is not a single reference to the word “gender” in the document. I'd be more than happy to discuss the national action plan in greater detail if we can allocate some time to that in the question period, because I think it's certainly worthy of further conversation.
In addition to rethinking how we reframe the problem, we need to think how we reframe the subject of African women, girls, and their communities. We need to be attentive to our perpetuation of stereotypes relating to sexual violence, conflict, and Africa. Harmful and grossly inaccurate representations ultimately reproduce unequal structures of power and undermine local capacities to identify and address problems.
Finally, we need to critically rethink our programming and policies related to sexual violence in order to integrate this reframing of both the problem and those caught up in it.
Above all else, this requires support for deep local research, which is sorely lacking and without which policies and programming remain weak and possibly misguided.
This also requires meaningful and regular consultation with local civil society organizations, including the churches locally and the Canadian civil society organizations as well, which have extensive experience in the region. A consultation-centred feedback loop could directly improve policy and programming development, implementation, and evaluation.
As well, a long-term vision and strategy is required, with the ultimate view of supporting social stability, and not just to return to levels of violence deemed “normal” for Africa.
In conclusion, I recognize the challenges of the many general ideas that have been put forward here. I sincerely hope tart these thoughts and workshop outcomes can contribute to improved programming and policy and, ultimately and most importantly, to meaningful improvement in the security of women and girls in conflict and post-conflict contexts.
Thank you. I look forward to your questions and to providing further detail.
:
As Madame St-Pierre mentioned, she and I both were involved in the consultative process. Actually, in my capacity at Peacebuild, we conducted the national consultations over the course of the summer. It was welcomed by members of civil society. We were very pleased that it finally happened. The plan was many years in the making, let's put it that way, so we were very pleased to see it.
I think that, overall, representatives of civil society see it as a starting point. It's something to improve upon. It's not as strong, I think, as we would like it to be. But as I said, it is a starting point. So beyond the obvious omission of the word “gender”, which I think has tremendous analytical implications for implementation, and the dedication of new resources to making sure that it is implemented across the Government of Canada, there's also no designated person right now, as far as I know, to see that this will happen. That's another element of resources that is lacking.
As far as I understand it, it's in Foreign Affairs, and Foreign Affairs is responsible for overseeing the coordination and implementation throughout the departments. Each department is to set up its own mechanism for evaluating what's going on in their respective department. That's my understanding.
It's my own personal opinion--and I think a number of members of civil society might also say this--that it is a starting point. The voice in the document is definitely passive. It's not terribly proactive, or as proactive as we would like it to be. There's certainly an element of leadership, let's say, that is lacking.
It's not surprising that we are reflecting Canadian interests in the document. It's about training Canadian personnel and making sure our capacity is up to speed. I find it to be very internal or inward-looking in terms of its orientation, and it doesn't reflect any leadership on the issue--or as much as I would like to see. Because we see, in the wording of the document, words like “the Government of Canada encourages”, “supports”, “promotes”, when it could be a lot more active and a lot more engaged and really be a leader on this issue.
Going back I think to issues of resources and making sure that it's properly implemented and evaluated, maybe some greater clarity about lines of accountability and monitoring over time.... Some civil society actors suggested the possibility of perhaps introducing performance evaluations of each government unit, where responsibilities to implement the plan could be tied to their performance vis-à-vis these indicators.
We also might want to look to the States, which has an ambassador for global women's affairs in the Department of State. Why can't we have here, maybe in a cabinet-level position, someone who is responsible for the leadership, monitoring, and implementation of this national action plan?
:
Thank you, Mr. Chairman.
Good afternoon, mesdames, and welcome to our committee. Thank you for taking the time to share your knowledge with us. For us, this is a very enriching and very informative about the subject we are currently addressing. Unfortunately, we have very little time. Otherwise, we could take a closer look at certain comments.
For example, Ms. Lebert, you said in your testimony that you had made some recommendations. But something troubled me a little when you talked about everything related to gender-based analysis. In fact you say that has been left out of foreign affairs documents; that is to say that it's no longer in them. I'm trying to understand. By removing that, they are diminishing the effort and disregarding everything that has been demanded for years in terms of parity, gender-based analysis and ways of implementing measures that will work well.
Similarly, you said, for example, with regard to voices and representation, that a larger number of women should not only take part in the consultations, but should also be in the field for training and prevention purposes. So that troubles me a little.
We talked about the action plan a little earlier. With regard to your recommendations and what you raised about understanding the unhealthy situation that currently prevails with regard to violence against women, did you perceive that the government was taking your recommendations into account in the action plan it is currently proposing?
From what we hear about the government's action plan, we get the impression that it's more a profession of faith than an action plan that would recommend implementing effective, sound measures that would have an impact. Obviously, that's very hard without funding. We all have dreams that are often borne by our imaginations, but we have to produce something in order to implement them.
I find that a bit unfortunate because, even now, in 2010, I get the impression that this aspect is being pushed aside and that no one wants to look at it. The further we move away from the field NGOs, the less we listen to them, even if we feel we are listening to them closely. We continue to close our eyes, and, in my opinion, impunity continues. I find it incredible that half of the planet is watching these strategies without implementing any measures to counter or change this male mentality.
:
Just to clarify, to start off with, I don't see the plan of action or UN Security Council resolutions related to women, peace, and security as band-aid solutions. I see them as integral. I don't see them as enough. I see our current action plan as a starting point that we can work with to improve. I think we need these types of commitments at international levels.
But what I'm saying is that there is a lack of what's happening at the macro level with what's happening locally. We need both, essentially, to better understand what happens at the intersections of both and to actually have some effect.
Yes, there is a lack of strategic direction, but I do think, having worked with Government of Canada officials, that there is genuine will in making this happen and of course in improving the lives of women and girls on the ground. The plan is well-conceived. For me, it's weak, but we need to put resources and political will into it. We need to have people appointed to make it happen and to evaluate its results and to have consultation with civil society organizations on an ongoing basis to make sure we're attaining the results. Right now, as far as I know, we don't even have benchmarks to measure our progress. These have to be established as well.
On resources, yes, I was very vague. I mean two things. I mean Canadian mining companies, certainly, operating in the Great Lakes region, but I also referred to artisanal mining, which is a lot more shady. It happens at a local level, and it has many intermediaries and subsidiaries between who eventually buys those minerals and who is digging them out. So I'm referring to the extractive industry as a whole, and both of these have certain elements that are less than glamorous or positive, I think.
I don't know if you've been following closely, but Global Witness and the Canadian Centre for International Justice launched a civil suit in Quebec against Anvil, I think, about two weeks ago, precisely for its alleged involvement in violence that occurred in southern DRC. Questions are raised about other companies as well--and certainly local articulations of concerns. I think the Anvil case will be interesting to follow because of the concerns that are being articulated. It's not always known where to hang those concerns, because the law internationally, of course.... I'm not a lawyer, but my understanding is that it's very difficult to pursue a transnational corporation to hold them accountable. So yes, I mean both.
Then you asked about independent funding. When I worked at Peacebuild previously and was involved in the consultations, the funding certainly was not independent. The money came from DFAIT to conduct these consultations. Currently, the centre for human rights, where I'm the coordinator of the POWER project, is funded by the Law Foundation of Ontario.