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Rape a Part of Daily Life for Women in Haitian Relief Camps

28 July 2010 Comments: 0

By Gina Ulysse, Ms. Magazine

Even after the after­shocks of the dev­as­tat­ing Jan. 12 quake sub­sided, women’s bod­ies were still trem­bling in Haiti. The cause, accord­ing to a new report, is the sys­tem­atic, per­sis­tent (and often gang) rapes that have become part of women’s daily lives in camps for inter­nally dis­placed per­sons (IDP).

The report, enti­tled Our Bod­ies Are Still Trembling–Haitian Women’s Fight Against Rape, and authored byMadre, the Insti­tute for Jus­tice and Democ­racy in Haiti and oth­ers, is based on data gath­ered by two del­e­ga­tions of U.S. attor­neys, com­mu­nity researchers and a women’s health spe­cial­ist. The research was done in May and June of this year. Mem­bers of the del­e­ga­tion inter­viewed more than 50 women rang­ing, from five to 60 years of age, who were referred to the del­e­ga­tion by KOFAVIV and FAVILEK, two grass­roots orga­ni­za­tions that focus on gender-based vio­lence. Lead­ers of these two orga­ni­za­tions, who have doc­u­mented over 230 rape cases, have been tar­geted in their camps for involve­ment with pro-democracy movements.

The report found that women and girls are par­tic­u­larly vul­ner­a­ble in over­crowded IDP camps. Women lack pri­vacy (they often bathe in pub­lic) and have weak­ened fam­ily and com­mu­nity struc­tures, as many lost their sup­port net­works in the quake.

Accord­ing to “Our Bod­ies Are Still Trem­bling,” most of the women “reported being raped by two or more indi­vid­u­als, who were unknown to them and almost always armed with guns, knives or other weapons.” The report also found that 95.7 per­cent of the vic­tims suf­fered from post trau­matic stress dis­or­der and more than half suf­fered from depression.

After women were assaulted, they had lit­tle access to med­ical ser­vices and, when they did, there were hardly any women health care providers. The prac­ti­tion­ers who were avail­able often could not pro­vide evi­dence of med­ical certification.

Women’s access to jus­tice has been even worse.  Women who reported rapes–and were already strug­gling with stigma­ti­za­tion and the psy­cho­log­i­cal effects of sex­ual assault–were often mocked or ignored by police. In some instances, these women have had to deal with police cor­rup­tion as well. More­over, cases have not been pros­e­cuted by the Hait­ian judi­cial sys­tem. Sur­vivors remain vul­ner­a­ble since they con­tinue to live in the same areas of the camps where they were attacked and their rapists remain at large. Sev­eral women reported that they’ve been raped on dif­fer­ent occa­sions since the quake.

Thus far, the gov­ern­ment of Haiti’s response to this increas­ing cri­sis is prac­ti­cally non-existent, espe­cially with theloss of fem­i­nist lead­ers who were fierce advo­cates for gen­der equal­ity in Haiti and who had worked in the women’s min­istry to address gender-based vio­lence. Local and inter­na­tional offi­cials inter­viewed have actu­ally down­played the report’s findings.

The United Nation’s Gender-Based Vio­lence (GBV) Sub-Cluster’s response to rape in Haiti received a crit­i­cal assess­ment by the del­e­ga­tion. The Sub-Cluster was cited in the report for fail­ing to sub­stan­tively con­sult with impacted groups. Specif­i­cally, “Poor women report they were not included in the post-disaster needs assess­ments (PDNA) … and have dif­fi­culty access­ing sub-cluster activities.”

One of the Sub-Cluster’s initiatives–a refer­ral card for sur­vivors of sex­ual vio­lence dis­trib­uted through­out the camps–actually con­tained inac­cu­rate infor­ma­tion such as out-of-service phone num­bers and incor­rect street addresses for rape-related resources. Accord­ing to the report, the UN  group did not con­duct any sys­tem­atic track­ing of rape cases, while the local grass­roots orga­ni­za­tion, KOFAVIV, did. In short, it seems the same women who were vic­tims were left to han­dle the sit­u­a­tion them­selves and pro­vide their own security.

The report con­cludes that the cur­rent sit­u­a­tion in Haiti is dire, espe­cially since rapes are often­times unre­ported and the gov­ern­ment of Haiti “fails to take the min­i­mum steps required under inter­na­tional law to pro­tect women’s rights to bod­ily integrity and, in some cases, to life.” The report’s authors advise donor states to work in con­cert with the Hait­ian gov­ern­ment and take a more active role in address­ing the secu­rity cri­sis that under­scores this per­sis­tent vio­lence. They make a num­ber of notable rec­om­men­da­tions to stake­hold­ers, includ­ing the imme­di­ate pro­vi­sion of secu­rity and light­ing in camps; invit­ing a UN Spe­cial Rap­por­teur on vio­lence against women to visit Haiti; guar­an­tee­ing full par­tic­i­pa­tion of women in all phases of Haiti’s recon­struc­tion; sys­tem­at­i­cally col­lect­ing data con­cern­ing vio­lence against women; and, finally, act­ing with due dili­gence to pre­vent, inves­ti­gate and pun­ish such acts.

Haiti is yet another coun­try that his­tor­i­cally ascribes lit­tle value to its women and girls when it comes to acknowl­edg­ing and pros­e­cut­ing gender-based vio­lence. Thus it not sur­pris­ing that women have no faith in the jus­tice sys­tem, as they are only too aware of their value to the state. It is quite telling that, accord­ing to the report, some women in Haiti pre­fer the term vic­tim as opposed to sur­vivor. Their bod­ies remain the scenes of crimes that we must not allow to go unpunished.

Photo from Flickr user UNICEF Sverige under Cre­ative Com­mons 2.0.

http://msmagazine.com/blog/blog/2010/07/28/rape-a-part-of-daily-life-for-women-in-haitian-relief-camps/

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