UN decries Boko Haram's sexual abuse of captured girls
(Nigeria) Ms Zainab Bangura, United Nations pecial
Representative of the Secretary-General on Sexual Violence in Conflict, on
Wednesday decried reported rape and forced marriages of female captives of Boko
Haram.
Bangura lamented in a statement signed by her Office’s
Advocacy and Women’s Rights Specialist, Ms Letitia Anderson, that one year
after the Chibok Girls abduction many were still in captivity.
“Over a year since the extremist group Boko Haram abducted
276 teenage girls in Chibok, Borno State, in Nigeria, many still remain in
captivity.
“I am appalled by reports that hundreds of the recently
released female captives were repeatedly raped by Boko Haram militias and
compelled to “marry” their captors. These latest revelations suggest that Boko
Haram is not only destroying existing family and community structures but is
bent on controlling their future composition.
“In order to give rise to a new generation raised in their
own image, they are waging war on women’s physical, sexual and reproductive
autonomy and rights.’’
According to her, sexual violence is not merely incidental,
but integral to Boko Haram’s strategy of domination and self-perpetuation.
The UN official said that she recently met with women and
girls in the Middle East that were newly released from sexual slavery by ISIL.
Bangura, therefore, renewed the UN’s call for the immediate
release of the abducted women and girls.
“I reiterate my calls for all abducted women and girls to be
immediately released from captivity and returned safely to their families. I
call upon the Government of Nigeria, with support from the international
community and local organisations, to provide medical and psychosocial care for
those who have been impregnated.’’
Bangura also called for the provision of treatment for women
and girls infected with Sexually Transmitted Infections and HIV/AIDs.
She urged the international community to adopt a coordinated
response that would address the root causes of violent extremism in communities
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