Monday, January 05, 2026 | 07:35 PM ISTहिंदी में पढें
Business Standard
Notification Icon
userprofile IconSearch

Judge orders probe into claims that French soldiers raped children in Central African Republic

Fourteen soldiers have been placed under investigation following statements by six children aged between nine and 13

Image

AFPPTI Paris
Judges in France will investigate claims that French soldiers raped children in the Central African Republic, the state prosecutor has announced.

Fourteen soldiers have been placed under investigation following statements by six children aged between nine and 13 that some were sexually abused by French peacekeepers between December 2013 and June 2014.

The case has been opened "against unnamed persons for carrying out the rape of minors" and "abusing the authority conferred by their functions", prosecutor Francois Molins said in a statement.

It has been almost a year since the French authorities opened an initial investigation after receiving a leaked internal United Nations report in July 2014.
 

But despite sending police to the Central African Republic to investigate in August, no children or soldiers were questioned and the allegations were never made public.

It was only after they were revealed by The Guardian newspaper last month that the full investigation was launched.

Both the French government and UN have denied trying to cover up the potentially devastating scandal, but Anders Kompass, the Swedish UN aid official who leaked the report to France was suspended from his job for "breach of protocol". He has since been reinstated.

The French prosecutor said yesterday he wanted to wait until he had spoken to the female UN investigator who wrote the report before launching the investigation, but that the United Nations had refused to lift the UN worker's diplomatic immunity status as required for a formal interview.

But a UN spokesman challenged the prosecutor's assertion.

"We very much cooperated with the French judicial authorities, they submitted a questionnaire to the lead investigator who responded," the spokesman said.

He added, "The issue of lifting or not of immunity is not really pertinent in this case."

Molins said he received written evidence from the UN investigator on April 29.

He did not draw any connection to the fact that April 29 was also the day the story was published in The Guardian.

French NGO Innocence in Danger, which works with child victims of violence, said it would take part as a civil party in the judicial investigation.

"(We) intend to verify that the ministry of defence, which was advised of this affair several months ago, has not treated the case lightly by not suspending the accused soldiers," said the NGO's lawyer, Olivier Morice.

Don't miss the most important news and views of the day. Get them on our Telegram channel

First Published: May 08 2015 | 2:48 AM IST

Explore News