Woman sacked for revealing UN links with sex trade
By Daniel McGrory
How a tribunal vindicated an investigator who blew whistle on workers in Bosnia
Times of London
August 07, 2002
A DAMNING dossier sent by Kathryn Bolkovac to her employers, detailing UN
workers' involvement in the sex trade in Bosnia, cost
the American her job with the international police force.
She was sacked after disclosing that UN peacekeepers went to nightclubs where
girls as young as 15 were forced to dance naked and have sex with customers, and
that UN personnel and international aid workers were linked to prostitution
rings in the Balkans.
After a two-year battle, an employment tribunal ruled yesterday that Ms Bolkovac
was unfairly dismissed by DynCorp, an American company whose branch in
Salisbury, Wiltshire, dealt with the contracts of the American officers working
for the international police force in Bosnia. There will be a further hearing at
Southampton to decide the amount of compensation
DynCorp must pay Ms Bolkovac.
During her time in Bosnia as an investigator, Ms Bolkovac, 41, uncovered
evidence of girls who refused to have sex being beaten and raped in bars by
their pimps while peacekeepers stood and watched. She discovered that one UN
policeman who was supposed to be investigating the sex trade paid �700 to a bar
owner for an underage girl who he kept captive in his apartment to use in his
own prostitution racket.
She detailed her findings in a series of explicit e-mails to DynCorp, but after
first being demoted and transferred from the investigation she was sacked for
allegedly falsifying her timekeeping records.
Charles Twiss, the tribunal chairman, said: 'We have
considered DynCorp's explanation of why they dismissed
her and find it completely unbelievable. There is no doubt whatever that the
reason for her dismissal was that she made a protected disclosure and was
unfairly dismissed.'
There are powerful voices in support of her claims, including that of Madeleine
Rees, the head of the UN Human Rights Commission office in Sarajevo, who is in
no doubt that trafficking in women started with the arrival of the international
peacekeepers in 1992.
As well as 21,000 Nato peacekeepers and aid workers, there were police from 40
countries trying to keep Bosnia�s warring factions apart.
�When the civil war ended in 1992 there were curfews and ordinary people didn�t
have cars or money,� Ms Rees said. �Only the international community would have
been able to get to the flats and bars being made available with foreign women.�
She estimates that there are more than 900 premises in Bosnia where sex can be
bought.
Richard Monk, a former senior British policeman who ran the UN police operation
in Bosnia until 1999, said: �There were truly dreadful things going on by UN
police officers from a number of countries. I found it incredible that I had to
set up an internal affairs department to investigate complaints that officers
were having sex with minors and prostitutes.
�The British officers were on the whole extremely good and very professional,
setting a great example. But there were policemen from other countries who
should not have been in uniform.�
The tribunal was told that a senior UN official, Dennis Laducer, was caught in
one of the most notorious brothels. Mr Laducer, Deputy Commissioner of the
International Police Task Force, was investigated by UN human rights officers
and is no longer with the mission.
The ruling yesterday will cause further embarrassment to the UN over the
behaviour of its peacekeepers. In March investigators disclosed that British aid
workers and the UN contingent in Sierra Leone were demanding sex from teenage
refugees in exchange for food and money. The UN�s refugee agency, which carried
out the inquiry, told of �a shameful catalogue of sexual abuse�.
Ms Bolkovac, a mother of three who now lives in The Netherlands, said that she
was elated by the tribunal�s ruling. �Now I hope to gain more international
exposure for this problem,� she said.
She was posted to Sarajevo in 1999 to investigate the traffic in young women
from Eastern Europe. �When I started collecting evidence from the victims of
sex-trafficking, it was clear that a number of UN officers were involved from
several countries, including quite a few from Britain,� she said. �I was
shocked, appalled and disgusted. They were supposed to be over there to help,
but they were committing crimes themselves. But when I told the supervisors they
didn�t want to know�. Two Britons, a UN peacekeeper and a policeman, have been
sent home after allegations involving the sex trade. Both are being
investigated.
Ms Bolkovac said that she witnessed frightened young women given exotic dance
costumes by club owners, who told them they had to perform sex acts on
customers, including UN personnel, to pay for the outfits.
�The women who refused were locked in rooms and food and outside contact was
withheld for days or weeks. After this time they were told to dance naked on
table tops and sit with clients, recommending the person buy a bottle of
champagne for DM200, which includes a room and �escort�.
�If the women still refuse to perform sex acts with the customers, they are
beaten and raped in the rooms by the bar owners and their associates. They are
told if they go to the police they will be arrested for prostitution and being
an illegal immigrant.�
Within days of reporting her findings in October 2000 she was demoted and six
months later was sacked. She claimed that DynCorp wanted her removed because her
work was threatening its �lucrative contract� to supply officers to the UN
mission. DynCorp said that she was dismissed for gross misconduct. During the
hearing DynCorp admitted that it had dismissed three officers for using
prostitutes. Since 1998, eight DynCorp employees have been sent home from
Bosnia; none has been prosecuted.
Forensic experts in Bosnia said yesterday that they had recovered the remains of
around 200 Muslims from a mass grave in a garden, bringing to about 6,000 the
number of exhumed victims of the 1995 Srebrenica massacre.