UN report urges Liberia to act on rape
MONROVIA / GENEVA (14 October 2016) - A UN report released today documents the high incidence of rape in Liberia as well
as the widespread impunity enjoyed by perpetrators.
The report, released by the United Nations Mission in Liberia (UNMIL) and the Office of the High Commissioner for Human
Rights (OHCHR), is based on information gathered by UN human rights officers between January 2015 and March 2016. It
indicates a very high number of rapes reported in all the 15 counties across the country, with 803 cases in 2015. “Rape
is the second most commonly reported serious crime in Liberia,” according to the report.
Liberia’s high incidence of rape is in part a legacy of its 14-year civil conflict, from which the country is still
rebuilding, says the report. According to the World Health Organization, “between 61.4 and 77.4 per cent of women and
girls in Liberia were raped during the war.” Despite this, there has been no criminal accountability for perpetrators of
war crimes in Liberia, including perpetrators of wartime sexual violence.
Impunity also prevails for recent rapes, with only two per cent of rapes and Sexual and Gender-Based Violence (SGBV)
cases reported last year resulting in a conviction in court.
Rape victims do not achieve justice due to multiple challenges, including institutional weaknesses, corruption, lack of
due diligence by government as well as logistical and financial constraints. “These combined factors have led to a
widespread culture of impunity for SGBV, particularly for rape, putting women and children at continued serious risk of
sexual violence,” says the report.
Other barriers to victims reporting rape include undue influence by traditional actors, cultural and patriarchal
attitudes, as well as gender stereotyping. A previous UN report published in December 2015, had already highlighted the
widespread impunity for SGBV crimes in the context of Liberian traditional and cultural practices.**
Social pressure to informally settle cases out of court is also a major obstacle to justice. “In the Liberian context,
victims face challenges at every step of the process if they attempt to hold their assailants criminally accountable,”
says the report.
The vast majority of perpetrators of rape in Liberia are males over the age of 18 who are known to the victim. Most
perpetrators are community members, and in some cases close relatives to the victim. “The shame of accusing a community
or family member of rape prevented most victims from reporting the case,” the report notes.
The report also says that close to 80 per cent of rape victims documented by the UN in Liberia in 2015 were under the
age of 18, including at least five cases of girls under the age of five being raped. However, children are not
necessarily disproportionately targeted, according to the report: “Child rape reports may be higher because they shock
the conscience and are not preempted by the generally discriminatory attitudes towards women survivors of rape.”
Liberia is party to a number of international human rights treaties and instruments, under which it has the obligation
to fight rape and gender-based violence. According to the report, the Liberian government’s inability, despite efforts
made, to ensure criminal accountability for perpetrators of rape shows “that Liberia is not in compliance with its human
rights obligations.”
The report provides a number of recommendations to the Government, as well as other national and international
stakeholders and the United Nations, to urgently combat the scourge of rape. These include enhancing the fight against
impunity through additional resources and capacities, including to the sex crimes prosecutor’s office, developing
forensic investigation, harmonizing rape provisions in the penal code and enacting the Domestic Violence Act, which
would make spousal rape a criminal offence.
The report also recommends that the Government implements recommendations previously made by UN human rights mechanisms
and encourages it to continue to seek technical assistance from international partners.
ENDS