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Peacekeeper jailed for porn films
DECLAN WALSH NICOLA BYRNE IN
DUBLIN
AN IRISH soldier
serving as a United Nations peacekeeper in Eritrea has been
caught making pornographic videos of local women and is now
serving a jail sentence in Ireland, it was revealed last
night.
The UN has launched an investigation into the
scandal which has again plunged the organisation’s
peacekeeping duties into controversy.
In the wake of
the highly damaging revelation, the Eritrean government has
condemned the activities of the Irish defence force and
questioned its continued presence in the war-scarred state in
the Horn of Africa.
Yesterday a government spokesman
said: "These people call themselves peacekeepers, when in fact
all they want is a long holiday and a chance to fool around
with our women. They did not respect our country, our culture
or our people."
The soldier in question returned to
Ireland last month and yesterday the Irish army said he would
be dismissed.
An army spokesman said: "As soon as his
commanding officer became aware of his behaviour he was
charged with conduct prejudicial to good order and
discipline."
The private has already been sentenced to
16 days’ detention by an army court, and is still serving the
sentence.
The statement added: "He is likely to be
dismissed from the force."
His videos were filmed last
March. Their main ‘star’, a 22-year-old Eritrean woman
believed to be a prostitute, is in custody facing obscenity
charges in her home country.
The tapes are understood
to have been discovered when the soldier, a man in his forties
and a native of the west of Ireland, showed them to friends.
The woman is believed to have worked at a brothel
which opened outside the Irish ‘green’ camp in the Eritrean
capital, Asmara, shortly after the Irish peacekeepers’ arrival
last December.
She befriended the soldier at the
centre of the scandal and became his girlfriend, she told
police. The woman named the man and said he was a captain,
although the Irish army has denied that this is the man’s
rank.
In an interview from her prison cell, she said
the soldier had told her he was making the video for
"remembrance" and would marry her and bring her to Ireland,
where he said he owned a hotel.
"He was telling me
what to do in the films in many different ways," said the
woman.
After filming, the soldier would take the woman
and her friends swimming at the Intercontinental Hotel, which
she considered a "great treat" as it is normally the preserve
of foreigners.
According to Eritrean authorities, the
videos consisted of "disgusting sexual acts".
Several
other women who are alleged to be prostitutes in the capital
have also been arrested since the scandal emerged.
Some hotels and night clubs which were popular with
peacekeepers, foreigners and prostitutes have also been
closed.
The multinational peacekeeping force in
Ethiopia and Eritrea (UNMEE) was established two years ago
after a ceasefire in the two-year border war between the two
countries.
This is the Irish army’s first time in
Africa since the 1960s when it served in the Congo. The
defence forces pride themselves on their peacekeeping role,
which has included stints in the Lebanon and Cyprus.
In a statement, UNMEE said it considered the
allegations concerning the videos very serious, and that it
was conducting an investigation.
"The mission has zero
tolerance towards such acts, and will do its utmost to quickly
and thoroughly establish the facts," it said.
"The
sexual or psychological exploitation of locals by UN staff or
their representatives, will never be tolerated."
However, a report commissioned by the UN itself noted
this year that prostitution has soared since peace was
declared in Eritrea and the UN peacekeepers arrived there.
Over the past two years, Italian, Danish and Slovak
peacekeepers have all been expelled in separate incidents for
having sex with minors.
Irish troops were issued with
orders to respect local sensitivities and to abide by a strict
code of conduct.
A senior source within the UN in
Asmara said the Irish soldier’s behaviour had caused deep
embarrassment. It is the latest in a catalogue of scandals
over the years, which have seen UN peacekeepers involved in
murder and rape.
The UN source said: "People have been
told not to talk about it or discuss it. It’s a very sensitive
issue. But of course everybody is talking about it."
A
third of adults in Eritrea are HIV positive and on their
arrival in Africa, the UN forces are shown explicit videos
about the effects of HIV and Aids.
Peacekeepers are
issued with male and female condoms and warned off visiting
the numerous brothels which have mushroomed in the capital.
However, with little for the troops to do in the city,
the outgoing commander of the Irish camp, Lieutenant
Commandant David Prendergast admitted that boredom was one of
the biggest problems facing his unit.
But he rejected
the claim by the Eritrean government that the Irish base was a
holiday camp.
"It is not that by any means," he said.
"It is a major task in the management of personnel and it is
difficult for the soldiers because they are away from home."
Built in the art deco style by Italian colonists in
the 1930s, Asmara looks more like a suburb of a European town
than an African city.
Although it is poor and
struggling to recover from the war, the clean streets are
paved with smooth tarmac, and there is little crime. The story
of the videos has consequently made front page news.
Last week’s edition of the Eritrean Profile newspaper,
published by the government’s ministry of information, also
points the finger at other peacekeepers in the city and says
it has evidence that they are engaged in activities similar to
those of the Irish soldier currently in jail.
With
friends like these…
UNITED Nations peacekeeping
troops have been involved in a catalogue of crimes and
scandals across the globe.
During the UN peacekeeping
mission to Somalia, it was claimed Canadian, Belgian and
Italian soldiers were involved in torture and murder.
An inquiry by the Canadian government of a young
Somali man in 1993, found that he had been murdered by its
troops and that a senior officer had lied in an attempt to
cover up the atrocity. Two soldiers were jailed.
In
Belgium, newspapers published photographs of two soldiers
holding a Somali boy over a fire. Three paratroopers were
prosecuted, but were acquitted by a military tribunal.
An Italian magazine published photographs showing
soldiers from the country’s elite paratroop regiment
apparently torturing a naked Somali with electrodes and
sexually abusing a Somali woman. Two generals who had
commanded the Italian force in Somalia resigned.
In
January 2000 the United Nations were sued for the first time
in its history for alleged complicity in the crime of genocide
which drove hundreds of thousands Rwandan Tutsis from their
homes.
Two Rwandan women accused the UN, which was
meant to be defending their families, of handing them over to
their killers or running away.
The families of these
women were slaughtered during the 1994 genocide in which
800,000, mostly Tutsi people, were slaughtered by Hutus.
In Bosnia, more than 20 peacekeepers were ejected from
the mission for theft and corruption. Nearly four dozen others
were sent home after allegedly abusing mental patients at a
hospital. Canadian peacekeepers were accused of rape, beatings
and sexual abuse of a teenage handicapped
girl. |
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