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Archive for April 13th, 2012

Victims want reparations that match the scale and scope of the crimes – Lubanga found guilty

Posted by African Press International on April 13, 2012

DRC: Thorny issue of reparations for Lubanga’s victims

Guilty: Thomas Lubanga is the first person to be convicted at the ICC (file photo)

LONDON,  – Motorcycles, school fees, counselling, cash: Thomas Lubanga’s `kadogo’ (child soldiers) know what reparations they want from the International Criminal Court (ICC). Less clear is what a cash-strapped tribunal can offer damaged children taken from their families and forced to fight in a brutal ethnic conflict in northeastern Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC).

“They expect something that will really help them to heal, to help them to recover from the loss of their childhood, their education,” said Bukeni Waruzi, an expert on child soldiers and the programme manager for Africa and the Middle East at NGO Witness.

“When a child is recruited, the minute he gets in the camp, he is not the same as before. It doesn’t take 10 years for a child to become a child soldier, it takes two days maximum, and the mind is changed. How do you repair that?”

Lubanga was convicted in March on three charges of recruiting and using child soldiers in the military wing of his Union of Congolese Patriots in 2002 and 2003. His ICC trial heard that children as young as nine served as fighters and bodyguards.

It was the ICC’s first-ever verdict, and the court is now heading into unfamiliar legal territory as judges must now decide on reparations for Lubanga’s victims.

No other international criminal tribunal has ever awarded reparations, but under ICC rules, those who have suffered injury or harm from a crime for which someone is convicted could receive restitution, compensation or rehabilitation.

“The [judges] will decide on Lubanga’s sentence, this is first step,” said Paolina Massidda, principal counsel of the ICC’s Office of the Public Counsel for Victims, which provides support to victims including legal representation. Under the ICC’s founding treaty, the Rome Statute, court-recognized victims are given lawyers and allowed to participate throughout a trial, including questioning witnesses.

“It is possible then for the court to start reparations proceedings, but there is no clear established procedure which is the reason why the judges are asking participants [in the case] to provide observations, among other things, on whether reparations should be awarded collectively or on an individual basis, to whom and how harm could be assessed.”

Collective/symbolic reparations

Luc Walleyn, who along with a Congolese lawyer represents 19 victims, doubts collective reparations would work for his clients – ex-child soldiers and their families.

“Child soldiers are not a community,” he said. “It is not like a village that has been victimized. They are very often in conflict with their own families. I cannot see my clients as a group. They are really individuals.

“If today you asked my clients how they wish to have reparations, the answers would be quite different from one to another. One will say I would like to start my studies again. Another would say I would like to have a motorcycle so I can… run a taxi business. A lot of them say `give me money’.”

''With so many potential pitfalls, there are fears that the reparations process could drag on as long as Lubanga’s trial''

But experts warn that cash payouts are unlikely, and many will get nothing unless they can prove to the court that they were harmed by Lubanga’s crimes. Waruzi worries this will be disappointing to the former child soldiers who are largely uneducated and untrained. Many suffer from drug addiction or diseases including HIV. Others have been victims of sexual violence.

“The victims think that what they want will be provided,” he said.”A child thinks, ‘I have been a victim. I shall get reparations because I won the case. Will they give me money? Will they give me a car? Will they buy me a house? How much will I receive?’ I think that’s what’s in the mind of the child soldiers.”

He wants reparations that match the scale and scope of the crimes.

“The ICC was initially thinking of symbolic reparations,” Waruzi said. “They were saying something like building a statue in the village that will really honour the victims. But reparations cannot be symbolic, because the crimes were not symbolic. It is now for the ICC to take full responsibility, to actually manage the expectations.”

On trial since January 2009 and in custody since 2005, Lubanga was declared indigent and given a legal aid lawyer. This will be reassessed by judges in the coming weeks. If he cannot pay for reparations himself, the court may turn to its Trust Fund for Victims which supports reparations from the voluntary contributions it receives from ICC members and others.

In 2011 the fund’s total annual income was 3.2 million euros. It has ring-fenced 1.2 million euros for court-ordered reparations.

Tailored messages

Though his resources are “modest” and the number of ICC cases expanding fast, the executive director of the fund’s secretariat prefers to talk about meeting rather than managing expectations. But Pieter de Baan admits the fund has been keeping a deliberately low profile on reparations until the judges decide how the process will work.

“Our plan is that once we have more information coming from the chambers on which direction they would like to go we will tailor the messages we will be sending out to communities,” said de Baan.


Photo: Anthony Morland/IRIN
A young member of Lubanga’s militia in Bunia in 2003 (file photo)

“The current message is that the Trust Fund is not a fund for all victims of all crimes in all places but is very much limited by the legal framework of the Rome Statute. It also doesn’t take away any of the responsibilities that the national government may have, to look after victimized communities. That will be part of the message as well.”

Reparations are only one part of the Fund’s work.

Operating under its General Assistance rather than Reparations mandate it has been on the ground in eastern DRC and northern Uganda since 2008 offering vocational training, trauma counselling, reconciliation workshops and reconstructive surgery to over 80,000 victims. This close contact has convinced de Baan that the best reparations are those that help people to get on with their lives.

“They might like to have some sort of reparation that would acknowledge their victimhood and their dignity as human beings that allows them to rebuild their lives in a way that is meaningful and sustainable,” he said.

Minefield?

Analysts agree, however, that reparations are a legal and social minefield. The potential problems – and solutions – are already filling pages of legal submissions to the judges.

In its filing to the court, the ICC’s registry warns that because Lubanga recruited children from his own Hema community which was in conflict with the Lendu people “should reparations be awarded in the case, the majority of victims will be from one side of an ethnic conflict in which both sides suffered harm.”

The registry also cautions against “ill advised reparation orders [which] may worsen the situation of former child soldiers by increasing the children’s stigmatization within their own community.” It also questions how eligible victims will be found as some have moved on from their villages.

Carla Ferstman, director of Redress, a human rights group working with war crimes victims, urges the judges to consider the many existing rulings on reparations . They come from truth commissions and regional courts, including the Inter-American Court of Human Rights.

“It’s not like the ICC will have to start from scratch,” said Ferstman. “We hope that the court isn’t going to try and reinvent the wheel but that it is going to look at all of these different kinds of processes. There is a lot of experience out there.”

She says it is essential that the ICC gets this right. “Ensuring there is some manner of reparations is part of this vital rebalancing of the criminal justice process to involve victims not only as observers and witnesses – [something] that makes it clear that what happened to them matters. It is like a humanization of criminal justice.”

But with so many potential pitfalls, there are fears that the reparations process could drag on as long as the trial. Walleyn says the former child soldiers he represents have become disillusioned after years of waiting.

“They have fewer expectations than six years ago,” said Walleyn. “However, they are still hoping to see something, because that was what was promised by the system of the court.”

lc/cb
source www.irinnews.org

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Gustave Lwaba: “I was hungering for tertiary education”

Posted by African Press International on April 13, 2012

EDUCATION: Online learning inspires refugees

Gustave Lwaba: “I was hungering for tertiary education”

DZALEKA,  – Sanky Kabeya, a refugee from the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC), has spent half of his 24 years in Dzaleka refugee camp in central Malawi. He attended primary and secondary school in the camp but, after graduating, his dream of furthering his education seemed an impossible one.

“I was just staying at home with nothing to do and I lost hope in everything,” he recalled.

With only three-quarters of refugee children accessing primary education and just over a third enrolled in secondary schools, according to a recent assessment by the UN Refugee Agency (UNHCR), higher education is generally considered a low priority and opportunities for young refugees like Kabeya are extremely limited.

Recently, however, there has been a growing recognition of the benefits that higher education can bring, not just to individual refugees, but to the vast reconstruction needs of countries like Afghanistan, Iraq, Somalia and the DRC which will require a new generation of teachers and other professionals when peace finally comes.

According to Audrey Nirrengarten, an education officer with UNHCR, there is also evidence that offering continuing education opportunities motivates more refugee children to complete primary and secondary school.

An education strategy released by UNHCR in February recognized the “huge unmet demand for higher education among refugees” and made improving access one of its goals over the next five years.

Although part of this approach involves doubling the current 2,000 scholarships a year available to refugees through the German-government-funded DAFI programme, a key element of the strategy is to make use of internet technologies and partnerships with academic institutions to reach much larger numbers of refugees through distance learning.

International Catholic NGO Jesuit Refugee Services (JRS) is pioneering this approach through a pilot project at three refugee camps, including Dzaleka, which offers small groups of refugees the opportunity to study towards a diploma in liberal studies from Regis University in Denver, Colorado at no cost. For refugees who do not meet the academic requirements, but are keen to further their education, JRS has developed several vocational courses in areas such as community health and entrepreneurship.

“JRS tries to do things that other organizations aren’t doing and this was certainly identified as a gap,” said David Holdcroft, JRS’s Johannesburg-based regional director. “The suffering in camps results from frustration building over years of not being able to prepare for the future.”

“Inspired”

Now in his second year of the three-year course, Kabeya’s feelings about the future have changed dramatically. “I’m very inspired, I’ve obtained a lot,” he told IRIN. “I want to make my future bright.”

''The suffering in camps results from frustration building over years of not being able to prepare for the future''

At Dzaleka, which is home to 18,000 refugees, mainly from the DRC, Burundi and Rwanda, the courses are mostly done online using solar-powered computers, but the students’ Skype interactions with their professors in the USA are supplemented by on-site tuition from an academic coordinator and two interns. “The need for cultural and linguistic adaptation was too great,” said programme coordinator Clotilde Giner, explaining that most of the 60 students are French speakers who have learned English through classes at the camp.

Carine Nice, 22, spoke no English when she arrived at Dzaleka four years ago, but she held on to her hopes of becoming a doctor. She had been in her second year of medical school when conflict erupted in the North Kivu region of DRC where she lived and she was forced to flee with her mother and five siblings.

“When I arrived, it was boring in the camp and I felt I was still young and needed to learn,” she told IRIN. After taking English and computer classes, she jumped at the opportunity to enrol in the diploma programme.

She is one of only eight women on the course. “According to the culture, [women think] studies are for men, and have low self-esteem,” she said.

Nice is fulfilling a requirement of the programme that students transfer some of the knowledge they are gaining to other camp residents, by leading a weekly discussion group for women aimed at improving their English and their confidence to apply for the programme next year.

Unlike scholarships available through the DAFI programme, the JRS programme is open to all ages and educational backgrounds.

Gustave Lwaba, a 47-year-old from the DRC, gave up his job teaching at Dzaleka’s primary school to enrol in the course. Opportunities to earn an income are scarce in the camp so the decision was a difficult one, said Lwaba, who has a wife and three children. “I was hungering for tertiary education and I didn’t have that chance in my country,” he explained. “I wanted more skills to help the community or even if I can be repatriated.”

If the JRS programme helps Lwaba achieve his goal of becoming a tertiary-level teacher, it could benefit not just him and his family, but a future generation of learners in the DRC and reconstruction efforts in that country.

Dadaab project

It is these broader goals that inform the thinking behind another project to bring higher education to refugees due to be launched at Dadaab camp in Kenya in the next academic year through a joint initiative between Canada’s York University and Kenya’s Kenyatta University.

Like the JRS programme, it will blend online and face-to-face learning, but will give students the option of earning a four-year bachelor’s degree, or opting out after two or three years with a teaching diploma.

“We’re also aiming towards something that could be accessed from anywhere so that if someone were to start the programme and then be repatriated or resettled, they could continue,” said Sarah Dryden-Peterson, a researcher at the University of Toronto, who is involved in the project.

Dryden-Peterson said refugee students tend to be extremely motivated. “They’re looking for any kind of printed material they can get their hands on to learn and keep their brains active,” she told IRIN. “More and more what we’re seeing is that with the opening up of telecommunications and internet access, refugees are following online courses and developing their own ways of learning by pulling things off the internet.”

Empty stomachs

Participants in JRS’s programme at Dzaleka need to be motivated to stick with their studies in a camp environment where poor living conditions and insufficient food can be a major distraction. In March, the World Food Programme, which supplies food aid to the camp, slashed rations for refugees by half due to a lack of funding and many of the students quietly typing at computers in the programme’s makeshift classroom were working on empty stomachs.

“It’s very difficult when you eat less and have to study, and we don’t know what will happen next month,” said Nice, who juggles her studies with helping her mother at home and working as an interpreter for UNHCR and JRS.

Kabeya said frequent blackouts meant he often strained his eyes studying by the light of a candle and that his friends told him he was wasting his time. “But I’m getting good grades and I’m very motivated because I have a goal.”

ks/cb
source www.irinnews.org

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Survivors of sexual violence in Indonesia face an uphill battle in recovery

Posted by African Press International on April 13, 2012

INDONESIA: Struggling to survive sexual violence

For Santi, staying quiet is the best option

JAKARTA, – Survivors of sexual violence in Indonesia face an uphill battle in recovery as a result of an inadequate legal system, police inaction, and prevailing societal attitudes that tend to be suspicious of victims, say activists.

Survivors are often reluctant to come forward because of attitudes within the family. Herna (not her real name), 27, was abused by her mother’s partner between the ages of 9 and 16 but her family did not fully understand her trauma. “I knew that what had happened to me was wrong,” she said. “I asked my stepfather for an apology, but he never gave it. Instead, my mother said to me that not everyone was perfect. After that, I left home for good.”

Santi (not her real name), 28, was molested by her swimming instructor when she was 14 years old. “I didn’t say anything because I thought people would blame me if I reported it,” she said. “Maybe they would say I shouldn’t have been in the pool with that man. I never sought help. For years I didn’t even acknowledge that it had happened to me and I had serious problems in relationships afterwards.”

Indonesia is a signatory to the Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination Against Women (CEDAW),which aims to strengthen the human rights of women, but the National Commission on Violence Against Women notes that between 1998 and 2010 there were close to 94,000 cases of sexual violence reported against women, including rape, trafficking of women for sexual purposes, sexual harassment, sexual torture and sexual exploitation.

The commission also highlighted that 20 Indonesian women a day experienced sexual violence, and in its annual notes, released in March 2012, reported some 4,335 cases of sexual violence in 2011 alone.

According to the Jakarta Police, in 2011 there were 1,787 cases of sexual violence across Indonesia, around 2,500 cases less than those recorded by the commission.

‘Archaic’ criminal code

The reasons for these numbers vary. In an October 2011 report submitted to the UN CEDAW committee, the commission said sexual violence experienced by women had yet to be fully recognized, and had not been given the handling and attention victims required. Andy Yentriani, an official of the commission, told IRIN that the Indonesian criminal code was archaic and could not properly deal with sexual violence.

“It’s based on a system that is four centuries old,” said Yentriani. “Rape is only understood as the insertion of male genitalia into female genitalia. Oral sex or anal sex are off the radar. The law also does not recognize that rape can be experienced by adult males.”

Barriers to reporting

Wulan Danoekoesoemo, the founder of Lentera Indonesia, an NGO survivor support group based in the capital, Jakarta, spoke of the challenges faced by survivors when reporting their ordeal.

“There’s very little immediate medical assistance for women in this country,” she said. “Rape survivors… may want to get themselves medically checked within 24 hours to provide physical evidence, but that’s a challenge due to bureaucracy, and because hospitals aren’t sensitive to the concerns of rape survivors.”

‘Insensitive’ authorities


Photo: Mark Wilson/IRIN
A group of women wait for a minibus to take them home

After five high-profile cases of rape were reported on Jakarta’s public minibus system and eight reports of sexual assault on the city’s main bus system in 2011, special women-only spaces on buses and trains were introduced.

Police spokesman Senior Commissioner Rikwanto explained how the police were tackling the problem of sexual violence against women. “We’re patrolling in the evening when workers are returning home and appealing to women to wear polite and proper clothing in public.”

Neta Pane, coordinator of Indonesian Police Watch (IPW), an independent police monitoring organization, said this attitude was undermining efforts to help survivors.

“Women are being asked not to provoke sexual violence,” he said. “So if something does happen, it’s the fault of the woman for not dressing properly.”

Pane pointed out that the maximum punishment for rape was 12 years, but perpetrators mostly received sentences under a year.

Vitria Lazzarini, executive coordinator of the Pulih Foundation, a women’s crisis centre in south Jakarta, said police attitudes toward survivors lacked sensitivity.

“They ask whether she enjoyed it, what she was wearing at the time, and what she was doing outside at that time of night. It’s completely inappropriate for a woman who is suffering substantial trauma,” Lazzarini said.

“Women are also worried that police won’t believe their claims, and will make them public,” said IPW coordinator Pane. “They are afraid that once people know of their experience, they will be shunned. It’s a fear that we particularly see in rural areas.”

‘Re-occurring theme’

Activists point to the need of a change in culture in Indonesia, and a shift in the way men view and treat women.

Commission official Andy Yentriani said current attitudes were partly the result of violence committed against women during Indonesia’s past conflicts in Timor, Papua and Aceh, and in the widespread societal violence in 1998. This was largely being ignored which had led to the image of women being tarnished.

“Violations against women are a re-occurring theme in Indonesia”, said Yentriani. “Today they are not even mentioned in the national curriculum.”

mw/ds/he
source www.irinnews.org

Posted in AA > News and News analysis | Leave a Comment »

 
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