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Angelina
Jolie in front of G8 foreign ministers speaks on sexual violence against
women
in London on April, 11, 2013 (Pool/AFP, Alastair Grant)
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LONDON —
World powers pledged new measures and funds on Thursday to tackle rape and
sexual violence used as a weapon of war, in a "historic" deal drawn
up with UN special envoy Angelina Jolie.
G8 foreign
ministers meeting in London agreed to commit $35.5 million (27 million euros)
to tackle what British Foreign Secretary William Hague likened to slavery as
"one of the greatest and most persistent injustices in the world".
Under the
new declaration, Hague said rape and sexual violence during conflict would
constitute grave breaches of the Geneva Convention, putting a responsibility on
signatories to actively seek out and put perpetrators on trial.
"I am
delighted to announce that today we have reached a historic agreement as G8
foreign ministers: pledging to work together to end sexual violence in
conflict," said Hague.
Hollywood
actress Jolie, a United Nations special envoy for refugee issues, praised Hague
and said the declaration signed at the Group of Eight ministerial meeting as
"long-overdue".
"Rape
is not a women's issue, or a humanitarian issue, it is a global issue and it
belongs here at the top table of international decision-making where he has put
it," she said.
Jolie and
Hague visited the Democratic Republic of Congo last month to highlight the
issue, which Britain has made a priority of its chairmanship of the G8 this
year.
In one
community in DR Congo, 11 babies between the age of six months and a year old
were raped last year, UN special representative Zainab Hawa Bangura told the
press conference.
Although
Hague conceded that the largest numbers of victims were in Africa -- 250,000
women raped in DR Congo over the last decade and hundreds of thousands in the
Rwandan genocide -- he said tens of thousands had also been abused during the
war in Bosnia.
The
declaration committed the G8 to work towards a new protocol setting out how to
investigate such crimes, provide new training for their militaries on how to
deal with sexual violence and provide support for prosecutions in countries
worst affected.
Jolie said
those raped had for too long "been the forgotten victims of war:
responsible for none of the harm, but bearing the worst of the pain."
"But
today, I believe, their voices have been heard, and that we finally have some
hope to offer them."
Anti-poverty
campaign group Oxfam welcomed the new initiative but said promises must be
accompanied by the necessary funding to ensure victims receive the protection
and justice they deserve.
"Much
more investment is needed to improve the police, security and justice systems
that are designed to protect women and girls, but so often fail to do so,"
said Oxfam's acting chief, Penny Lawrence.
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