Thursday, February 17, 2011

Women In War Zones: Sexual Violence in the Congo

This is a great documentary film from 2009 on sexual violence in the Congo:


Women in War Zones Trailer from Greg Heller on Vimeo.

Class Action Lawsuit by Female Soldiers Against the Defense Department

It should come as no surprise to anyone that has followed the situation regarding women in the military that a class action lawsuit has been filed due to the inability of the U.S. military to effectively investigate and prosecute sexual assaults.I have written about this extensively in the past and while the lawsuit did not add much new information, it serves to highlight the ongoing callousness that is directed towards victims of sexual assault.

Here are my previous posts on the subject:

http://endviolencetoday.blogspot.com/2010/02/women-at-war-bbc-goes-in-depth.html

http://endviolencetoday.blogspot.com/2010/04/women-are-not-just-victims-different.htm
l

http://endviolencetoday.blogspot.com/2010/01/peril-in-war-zones-sexual-abuse-by.html

V DAY and the City of Joy

V-Day in Conjunction with UNICEF local non-profits in the Congo have opened up a center in the Congo for women who have experienced sexual violence known as City of Joy. It just opened on February 4, 2011 See how they built it
here:


Building the City of Joy from V-Day Until the Violence Stops on Vimeo.


Visit the V-DAY Congo Campaign site for more information: http://drc.vday.org/

Thursday, January 13, 2011

The Next Resource Wars will be in Africa




While wars are raging in Afghanistan and Iraq (Yemen & Pakistan too for those who are keeping score at home) the next big wars will not be centered in the Middle East. Africa is home to many of the rare earth minerals that fuel the technology of the 21st Century and the Congo has many of the best reserves. Amidst the turmoil of the lame duck session of Congress President Obama revealed his strategy for dealing with the Lord's Resistance Army in the Congo. It is becoming apparent that instability in the Congo is against the national interests of the United States. The strategy which is discussed heavily in Foreign Policy Magazine, is murky at best and like many advisory efforts looks as if it is headed for an escalation. More over, the Congolese Army is often not a competent or ethical partner. The only good news that has come out of the Congo as of late has been the indictment of a high level war criminal at the International Criminal Court.

Thursday, November 18, 2010

Vermont Students as Activists for the Congo

Several students from Saint Michael's College here in Vermont are making headway in their campaign to end U.S. support for Rwanda and Uganda. Both nations allegedly have made forays into the Congo and their soldiers have committed rapes and other atrocities. This effort is part of the Dear Hillary Campaign which was founded at the college. Early this year Secretary Clinton stated that the situation in the Congo was a matter of national security and it is hoped that advocacy such as this will help the U.S. live up to that assertion.









Saturday, October 30, 2010

Security Council was Briefed on Congo Rapes

On October 14 the United Nations Security Council was briefed on the recent rapes that happened under noses of U.N. peacekeepers. PRI'S " The World" discusses various strategies for dealing with the situation in the Congo including an interesting program that tries to address the problem through the rapists who are often children themselves. A fictionalized account of one such case is detailed in the novel Beasts of No Nation.

Congo's Lastest Horrors

News regarding rape in the Congo rarely lets up. This article from Salon details the new allegations of the rape and murder of Congolese women at the hands of Angolan government officials. It also gets into the failure of the integration of women into the peacekeeping process on the 10 year anniversary of the U.N. resolution that was supposed to make it so.