Opinion

New way to fight sexual violence in conflict zones – Zhi Ming Sim

Progressive defunding of military and intelligence fronts the first step towards protecting women.

Updated 5 months ago · Published on 04 Dec 2023 7:00AM

New way to fight sexual violence in conflict zones – Zhi Ming Sim
Where there is conflict, there is often sexual violence, which can include rape, sexual slavery, forced pregnancy, forced abortion and forced marriage. – Pixabay pic, December 4, 2023

GAZA, Ukraine, Myanmar, Syria, Yemen, South Sudan, and the Democratic Republic of the Congo – the world is witnessing the highest number of active conflicts since World War II.

Where there is conflict, there is often sexual violence, which can include rape, sexual slavery, forced pregnancy, forced abortion and forced marriage.

More than two decades after the United Nations Security Council passed the landmark Women, Security, and Peace Resolution 1325 – which explicitly calls for women and girls to be protected in conflict situations and affirms the significance of women’s participation in peacebuilding – conflict-related sexual violence remains rife.

The UN reported 2,455 verified cases across 20 conflicts in 2022 alone. The real number is likely to be much higher as the vast majority of cases are never reported, partly because of sensitivities and stigma surrounding sexual violence.

Women and girls made up 94% of cases in 2022.

Rape has been reported in the Russia-Ukraine war, as well as the Democratic Republic of Congo, which had 701 verified cases, the most reported by the UN. In one nine-day period in November 2022, 66 women were raped at Kisu by M23 militia members to warn and punish civilians supporting rival armed groups.

Rape also happens in detention settings. Survivors of the civil war in Myanmar have testified that rapes as torture were common tactics deployed on activists in state custody. In Syria, sexual violence has been perpetrated against detained women, men, girls and boys, the Independent International Commission of Inquiry on the Syrian Arab Republic found.

Child victims and implicit tolerance

Alarmingly, children made up 32% of all verified cases.

In Sudan, RSF militia have targeted girls and women leaving places of refuge for school, work or medical help.

In Iraq, among Yazidi survivors who returned from ISIS captivity and forced marriage, hundreds remain in displacement sites grappling with significant mental health challenges. Some have children born of rape.

In Gaza, Human Rights Watch and the UN have flagged that women and girls are especially vulnerable to sexual violence.

As Human Rights Watch has explained, the Israel government’s blockade of medical supplies, clean water, and electricity to Gaza will likely leave any such survivors of sexual violence untreated – at risk of spreading sexually transmitted diseases, infections, and severely unhygienic conditions.

Conflict-related sexual violence is not always committed by national armies directly. As my research has explored, state-sponsored militia also commit these acts, alongside non-state entities such as armed rebel groups, and guerrillas.

While conflict-related sexual violence has been promoted as policy and strategy in extreme cases of ethnic cleansing and genocide, it is much more common for that sexual violence to occur due to “commander’s tolerance”, where acts are neither prohibited nor an explicit policy.

Critical feminist perspectives suggest practical measures to address sexual violence in conflict. Some argue the “add women and stir” framework of Women, Peace and Security resolutions has failed to address the fundamental structures of masculine militarism at the crux of pervading sexual violence in conflict.

Contrary to the UN-popularised “weapon of war” narrative, sexual violence rarely unfolds under explicit military directives. Instead, armed groups, national governments, and institutions – characterised by toughness, aggression, and domination – underpin implicit tolerance for sexual violence and its proliferation in conflict.

This means unless there are purposeful steps to disrupt and change gender and social relations, sexual violence in conflict will persist, and so, too, will relations of domination that sustain conditions for conflict such as exaggerated ideals of manhood that have often justified military action and allowed military personnel to dehumanise women and minority communities.

Anti-war approach in policymaking

Resolving conflict-related sexual violence, therefore, should involve moving beyond merely centring gender within international security dialogues, but to rethink and address meanings of security that often necessitate the use of violence.

This will be no small feat.

The traditional view of security has been state-based and state-centric, defining security on the basis of national defence, border protection and military strength. But as Cynthia Cockburn has argued, this definition of security is “ill-designed to recognise civilian insecurities, and in particular women's physical, sexual, and reproductive vulnerabilities in war”.

New definitions of “security”, as Arun Kundnani wrote, should focus on “the building of institutions that foster social and ecological relationships needed to live dignified lives”.

This means a progressive defunding of military and intelligence institutions, as well as border infrastructures and the construction of alternative institutions that ensure women’s safety.

Policymakers could focus on anti-war collectives built around solidarity rather than threats, and reparations rather than militarised retribution and vengeance. For this to become reality, grassroots voices and communities need to be centred in policymaking.

Survivors of conflict-related sexual violence could not only be consulted, but become decision-makers in domestic and international processes as they work towards more comprehensive state accountability and social justice for a more humane world.

This would require a paradigm shift in the way the international community treats conflict-related sexual violence, and the ways it values militarism and defines security. – The Vibes, December 4, 2023.

Zhi Ming Sim is a PhD candidate in political science at York University, Toronto.

Published under Creative Commons and in partnership with 360info.org

Related News

World / 1y

China sentences man who attacked women at barbecue restaurant to 24 years

World / 2y

Austria sees ‘dramatic’ increase in female murder victims

Opinion / 2y

Sexual abuse is a matter of social justice – Syerleena Abdul Rashid

World / 2y

Rape survivors describe slavery, mutilation in Tigray: Amnesty

Malaysia / 2y

Too few women in govt makes ending child marriage an under-represented task, rep says

Malaysia / 2y

Beaufort police apprehend alleged wife, child beater after 3-day hunt

Spotlight

Malaysia

Usno leader calls for Sabah govt overhaul after legal blunder

By Jason Santos

Malaysia

UiTM vice-chancellor denies students in black are protesters

Malaysia

PAS denounces Teresa Kok death threat

Malaysia

UiTM admissions backlash sign of misplaced priorities, say academics

By Alfian Z.M. Tahir

Malaysia

Teresa Kok gets 2 bullets in mailbox

Malaysia

Retrieve MA63 documents from London, researcher urges Sabah govt

By Jason Santos