Paris prosecutors are investigating accusations that French soldiers in Central African Republic sexually abused children they were sent to protect.
The French probe follows an initial United Nations investigation into the allegations a year ago -- both of which were kept secret until a report in the Guardian newspaper yesterday forced officials to publicly acknowledge them.
A UN worker leaked information about the UN investigation to French authorities last year, the UN Secretary-General's office said in a statement. That worker, identified by the Swedish government as Swede Anders Kompass, has been suspended and is now under internal investigation.
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Early in 2014, the Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights in the country's capital, Bangui, carried out a probe after "serious allegations of sexual exploitation and abuse of children by French military personnel," the UN Secretary-General's office said yesterday.
The UN investigation has now been passed on to French authorities, said a spokesman for the UN human rights office in Geneva, Rupert Colville. The French government was informed of the accusations in July 2014, the Defense Ministry said in a statement.
About 10 Central African children told UN officials in Central African Republic that they were sexually assaulted by French soldiers around the M'Poko airport between December 2013 and June 2014, the statement said.
The allegations of sexual abuse, the secretive nature of the probe and the treatment of the suspended UN worker all cast a new shadow on the world body, which has faced accusations of abuses by its peacekeeping forces in the past.
The UN high commissioner for human rights, Zeid Raad al-Hussein, was the author of a lengthy report on preventing sexual exploitation by peacekeepers that the global body commissioned a decade ago after a scandal involving UN troops in Congo.
Known as the Zeid Report, it recommended among other things that allegations of abuse be followed by a professional investigation and that UN member states should pledge to prosecute their soldiers as if the crime had been committed in their own country.