The United Nations said will investigate
allegations that survivors of a deadly cyclone in
Mozambique are being
forced to have sex with community leaders for food.
More
than 1,000 people died and tens of thousands were forced from their
homes when Cyclone Idai hammered Mozambique before moving inland to
Malawi and Zimbabwe, in one of the worst climate-related disasters to
hit the southern hemisphere.
ZERO TOLERANCE
The
UN pledge came a day after Human Rights Watch (HRW) published accounts
of female survivors who said they were abused by local leaders, even as a
second powerful storm, Cyclone Kenneth, pounded the impoverished
southeast African nation.
“As with
any report on sexual exploitation and abuse, we are acting swiftly to
follow up on these allegations, including with the relevant
authorities,” the UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs
(UNOCHA) said in a statement.
“The
UN has a zero tolerance policy on sexual exploitation and abuse. It is
not, and never will be, acceptable for any person in a position of power
to abuse the most vulnerable, let alone in their time of greatest
need.”
Officials from Mozambique’s disaster management authority were not immediately available for comment.
The
UNOCHA said it had broadcast clear messaging through multiple
communications channels that aid is free and sexual exploitation and
abuse are unacceptable.
The agency
has also trained hundreds of aid workers and volunteers on the
prevention of sexual exploitation and abuse, it said, adding there were
“established clear referral pathways for any potential case of sexual
exploitation and abuse”.
SEX FOR FOOD
HRW
said they had spoken to 12 women in Mozambique’s central Nhamatanda
district who were sexually exploited, and also had accounts from aid
workers and residents in other parts of the country hit by Idai,
including the port city of Beira.
The
community leaders demanded money from survivors to have their names
included on aid distribution lists, while others coerced women into
having sex for a bag of rice, said the rights group.
“The
sexual exploitation of women struggling to feed their families after
Cyclone Idai is revolting and cruel and should be stopped immediately,”
said Dewa Mavhinga, Southern Africa director at Human Rights Watch in a
statement.
“The authorities should
promptly investigate reports of women being coerced into exchanging sex
for food and appropriately punish anyone using their position of power
to exploit and abuse women.”
International
partners, particularly the UN, should ensure greater oversight of the
conduct of local officials during the distribution of humanitarian aid,
added the rights group.
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