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- Treasury Department says they are the first US sanctions issued with a dedicated focus on conflict-related sexual violence
WASHINGTON: The US on Tuesday imposed sanctions on a South Sudanese military officer and governor accused in connection with the rapes of hundreds of women and girls. They are the first US sanctions issued with a dedicated focus on conflict-related sexual violence, the Treasury Department said.
Treasury’s Office of Foreign Assets Control designated James Nando, a major general in the South Sudanese army, who is accused of overseeing forces that raped hundreds of women and girls between 2018 and 2021.
Treasury said Nando was aware of the abuses and did not prevent or punish fighters responsible for sexual violence when it happened under his watch.
Alfred Futuyo, governor of Western Equatoria, is also named in the sanctions documents. Affiliated with the Sudan People’s Liberation Movement/Army, an opposition group, Futuyo is accused of carrying out numerous attacks in his state that resulted in abductions and gang rapes of hundreds of civilians.
Among other things, the sanctions deny Nando and Futuyo access to any property or financial assets held in the US and prevent US companies and citizens from doing business with them.
“The United States rejects all forms of sexual violence — which women and children bear the brunt of — in armed conflict,” said Treasury Deputy Secretary Wally Adeyemo in a written statement. “We remain committed to holding perpetrators and enablers of conflict-related sexual violence accountable so long as this scourge exists.”
In November, President Joe Biden signed a presidential memorandum to give additional support to the UN special representative to the secretary-general on sexual violence in conflict and to survivors of sexual violence in conflict settings.