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- From: rich@pencil.cs.missouri.edu (Rich Winkel)
- Newsgroups: misc.activism.progressive
- Subject: Cambodia: UNTAC and sexual harassment
- Message-ID: <1993Jan24.091508.29894@mont.cs.missouri.edu>
- Date: 24 Jan 93 09:15:08 GMT
- Sender: news@mont.cs.missouri.edu
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- The ACTivist Volume 9 #1, January 1993.
-
- The ACTivist is published monthly by the ACT for Disarmament
- Coalition, 736 Bathurst St., Toronto, Ontario, Canada M5S 2R4, phone
- 416-531-6154, fax 416-531-5850, e-mail web:act. Hard copy
- subscriptions are available with a donation of $10 or more to ACT for
- Disarmament. Reprint freely, but please credit us (and send us a copy!)
-
- /** gen.newsletter: 129.9 **/
- ** Written 11:46 pm Jan 9, 1993 by web:act in cdp:gen.newsletter **
- CAMBODIA: UNTAC AND SEXUAL HARASSMENT
-
- Last October, more than 150 representatives of women's groups
- and NGOs in Cambodia released an open letter to Yasushi Akashi, chief
- of the United Nations peacekeeping team in Cambodia (UNTAC). The
- letter outlined "a dramatic increase in prostitution since UNTAC's
- arrival and a noticeable absence of condoms and education about their
- use ... HIV has reached an 'emergency level' of at least 75 per cent
- among blood donors", and noted that "sexual harrassment [by UNTAC
- members] occurs regularly in public restaurants, hotels and bars,
- banks, markets and shops ... women feel restricted in their movements
- in social and professional settings because of the inappropriate
- behaviours they receive from male UNTAC personnel." They cited
- cases of harrassment which included inappropriate advances towards
- a six year old Khmer-American girl.
-
- The immediate cause of the letter was a September meeting with
- NGOs at which Mr. Akashi had said that his peacekeeping troops, as
- "18-year-old, hot-blooded soldiers" deserved to enjoy "young,
- beautiful beings of the opposite sex."
-
- After the letter was published in the Phnom Penh Post, Akashi
- promised to set up an education campaign about HIV and other
- sexually transmitted disease, and to hire a 'Community Relations
- Office' -- an office, however, which was to deal with all complaints
- from the community, not specifically sexual harrassment, and
- which was staffed entirely by one young woman. One United
- Nations volunteer, in a letter to the Phnom Penh Post on November
- 20, dismissed these measures as "a farce" and called for Akashi's
- resignation.
-
- ** End of text from cdp:gen.newsletter **
-