Rape used in Ukraine as a Russian ‘military strategy’, says United Nations

The United Nations has verified “more than a hundred cases” of rape or sexual assault since the beginning of the war, a U.N. envoy said

Published - October 14, 2022 07:04 pm IST - Paris:

Two women wait for a boat to cross the Siverskyi Donets River next to a destroyed bridge in the Donetsk region. Image for representation.

Two women wait for a boat to cross the Siverskyi Donets River next to a destroyed bridge in the Donetsk region. Image for representation. | Photo Credit: AFP

Rape and sexual assault attributed to Moscow’s forces in Ukraine are part of a Russian “military strategy” and a “deliberate tactic to dehumanise the victims”, U.N. envoy Pramila Patten told AFP in an interview.

“All the indications are there,” the U.N. special representative on sexual violence told AFP on Thursday, when asked if rape was being used as a weapon of war in Ukraine.

“When women are held for days and raped, when you start to rape little boys and men, when you see a series of genital mutilations, when you hear women testify about Russian soldiers equipped with Viagra, it’s clearly a military strategy,” she said.

“And when the victims report what was said during the rapes, it is clearly a deliberate tactic to dehumanise the victims.”

The United Nations has verified “more than a hundred cases” of rape or sexual assault since the beginning of the war, Ms. Patten said.

The first cases were reported just "three days after the invasion of Ukraine" on February 24, she added, referring to a UN report released in late September.

The report “confirmed crimes against humanity committed by the Russian forces, and according to gathered testimonies, the age of the victims of sexual violence ranges from four to 82 years old,” Ms. Patten said.

The victims are mostly women and girls, but also men and boys, she added.

“There are many cases of sexual violence against children who are raped, tortured and kept hostage,” she said.

But “reported cases are only the tip of the iceberg,” she added.

“It’s very difficult to have reliable statistics during an active conflict, and the numbers will never reflect reality, because sexual violence is a silent crime” that is largely underreported.

‘Battle against impunity’

Ms. Patten said her fight against sexual violence was “a battle against impunity”.

“That’s why I went to Ukraine (in May): to send a strong signal to the victims, to tell them that we stand with them and to ask them to break their silence,” she said.

But it was “also to send a strong signal to the rapists. The world is watching them, and raping a woman or girl, man or boy, will not be without consequences”.

Rape as a weapon of war has been reported in conflicts worldwide, from Bosnia to the Democratic Republic of Congo.

But the war in Ukraine has marked a turning point in international attitudes, the U.N. envoy said.

“There is now political will to fight impunity, and there is consensus today on the fact that rapes are used as a military tactic, a terror tactic,” Ms. Patten said.

“Is it because it is now happening in the heart of Europe? That might be it.”

She said she hoped, however, that the focus on Ukraine would not detract from other conflicts.

“I find this attention to... sexual violence linked to conflicts to be very positive,” she said, unlike in the past when the issue was viewed as “unavoidable”, mere “collateral damage” or even a “cultural issue”.

Ms. Patten said she was also concerned about the risk of human trafficking.

“The women, girls and children who have fled Ukraine are very, very vulnerable, and for predators, what is happening in that country is not a tragedy but an opportunity,” she said.

“People trafficking is an invisible crime, but it’s a major crisis.”

More than seven million Ukrainians have fled the fighting into other European countries since the war started, the U.N. refugee agency says.

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