February 15, 2005
The U.N.’s Rape Of The Innocents
By
Michelle Malkin
Kofi Annan must have the world’s
thickest set of industrial-quality earplugs.
How else can he block out the cries
of
Congolese girls raped by United Nations
"peacekeepers" sent to protect the innocents from
harm?
Fifty U.N. peacekeepers and
U.N. civilian officers face an estimated 150
allegations of sexual exploitation and rape in the Congo
alone. Last Friday, ABC’s 20/20 program aired a
devastating expose by investigative reporter Brian Ross
highlighting some of the worst alleged crimes.
The accused include
Didier Bourguet, a United Nations senior official
from France charged with running an Internet pedophile
ring in the Congo. According to ABC News and others,
pictures taken from his personal computer contained
thousands of photos of him with hundreds of girls.
Police say Bourguet had turned his bedroom, plastered
with mirrors and rigged with remote-control cameras,
into a stealth
porn studio. He was caught in a sting operation
while allegedly preparing to rape a 12-year-old girl.
In one of the photos confiscated
from Bourguet, a
tear can be seen rolling down the cheek of a victim.
Hundreds of babies, fathered by
U.N. personnel, have been born to Congolese girls and
women—including the 15-year-old deaf mute daughter of
Aimee Tsesi, who told Ross she was turned away at the
gates of the U.N. camp when she went for assistance.
"The U.N. is not able to give me food or money for my
grandson," she told ABC News. "But if the U.N.
hadn't brought this soldier here my daughter would not
have become pregnant. And I would not be going through
this suffering."
Annan’s spinners would have us
believe that the problem of U.N. sex predators is
confined to a tiny band of rogues and locals beyond the
control of headquarters. But according to Bourguet’s
lawyer, there was an entire network of U.N. personnel
who had sex with underage girls in Congo and the Central
African Republic. Investigators are now digging into
claims of U.N. infiltration by organized pedophiles.
The Times of London
reports further that two Russian pilots who served
in the U.N.’s peacekeeping contingent based in Mbandaka
"paid young girls with jars of mayonnaise and jam to
have sex with them. They filmed the sessions and sent
the tapes to Russia. But the men were tipped off and
left the area before U.N. investigators arrived."
The paper also reports that at least two other U.N.
officials—a Ukrainian and a
Canadian—left the Congo after getting local women
pregnant.
In July 2002, Congolese military
official
Jean Pierre Ondekane said that all the U.N. mission
in Congo would be remembered for in the village of
Kisangani was
"for running after little girls." Annan’s
special adviser from Jordan, Prince Zeid Raad Al
Hussein,
concluded last year that the "situation appears
to be one of ‘zero-compliance with zero- tolerance’
throughout the mission."
Human rights groups say such
monstrosities have been tolerated by U.N. brass for
years. Joseph Loconte
noted in the Weekly Standard last month that
the Congo revelations come three years after another
U.N. report found "widespread" evidence of sexual
abuse of West African refugees. Girls and women in East
Timor, Cambodia, and Kosovo have reported sex crimes
perpetrated by U.N. peacekeepers.
In 2001, American whistleblower
Kathryn Bolkovac, a Nebraska policewoman who worked
for U.N. security in Bosnia, uncovered scores of sex
crime allegations and prostitution rings in the Balkans
involving her fellow U.N. employees. Girls were forced
to dance in bars for U.N. personnel and beaten or raped,
Bolkovac reported. After being fired from her job for
"time sheet irregularities," she told a British
tribunal that Mike Stiers, the international police task
force's deputy commissioner, flippantly dismissed
victims of human trafficking as "just prostitutes."
This mother of all humanitarian
abuse scandals at the U.N. is only just beginning to
pierce the world’s conscience. Annan has
trotted out a refurbished zero-tolerance policy and
is trumpeting a few
arrests in Morocco. But such faint-hearted damage
control measures are not enough.
It’s time to
rethink the nearly half-billion dollars in aid we
send to U.N. peace-keeping operations. How much more aid
must we squander on holier-than-thou wolves in
do-gooders’ clothing? For the sake of the innocents
raped and pillaged in the name of humanitarianism, let’s
get stingy.
Michelle Malkin [email
her] is author of
Invasion: How America Still Welcomes Terrorists,
Criminals, and Other Foreign Menaces to Our Shores.
Click
here for Peter Brimelow’s review. Click
here for Michelle Malkin's website.
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