BFF-35 US diplomat calls for ‘decisive action’ in Afghan alleged abuse ring

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US diplomat calls for ‘decisive action’ in Afghan alleged abuse ring

KABUL, Dec 3, 2019 (BSS/AFP) – Afghan authorities must take “decisive
action” following reports of an alleged paedophile ring operating in schools
in eastern Afghanistan, a senior US diplomat said Tuesday.

The comments by Alice Wells, US assistant secretary of state for South and
Central Asia, come after British newspaper The Guardian last month detailed
accounts of the abuse, which allegedly affected more than 500 victims in
Logar province south of Kabul.

“We call on Afghan authorities, including the Attorney General’s Office,
to take decisive action on deeply troubling reports of sexual abuse in Logar
schools,” Wells wrote on Twitter.

The alleged abuse comes amid an ongoing tolerance of paedophilia and
pederasty in some parts of Afghanistan, including the practice of bacha bazi,
or “boy play”, where older men make boys dress up as women and then rape
them.

“Sexual violence and practices like bacha bazi have no place in any
society,” Wells said.

President Ashraf Ghani’s spokesman Sediq Sediqqi said the Afghan
government is “strongly committed to taking decisive actions” in the case,
following a full probe.

“Law enforcement entities will hold the perpetrators accountable,” Sediqqi
said on Twitter.

The scandal has generated international outrage that was only fuelled by
authorities’ initial reaction.

The National Directorate of Security (NDS) arrested two whistleblowers in
the case and said their “baseless” claims were part of a scheme aimed at
securing asylum in a foreign country.

It was only after Ghani intervened that the NDS released the two men.

In 2017, Afghanistan introduced measures that criminalized the sexual
abuse of minors, following reporting on bacha bazi by several media outlets
including AFP.

However children are often reluctant to come forward in a culture that
still shames victims rather than going after perpetrators.

The US has previously come under criticism for treading softly around the
issue of Afghan child abuse. According to a watchdog report in January 2018,
the US military funded Afghan police and security units even though American
officials knew members were implicated in gross human rights violations,
including child sexual assault.

BSS/AFP/FI/ 1511 hrs