A UN committee has urged Peru to compensate women who were forcibly sterilised in the 1990s, ruling that the state policy could constitute a “crime against humanity”.

Forced sterilisation was part of a programme implemented by Peru’s then president Alberto Fujimori during the final four years before he left office in 2000 after a decade in power.

The United Nations committee on the elimination of discrimination against women said hundreds of thousands of people had been affected. The 23-member committee issued its finding after reviewing a joint complaint filed by five victims who were forcibly sterilised between 1996 and 1997. “The victims claimed that the forced sterilisations they underwent had severe and permanent consequences for their physical and mental health,” it said in a statement.

The experts denounced Peru’s failure to properly investigate the violations and compensate the victims, urging the country to put in place a “comprehensive reparation programme for victims”.

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  • Kit@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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    19 days ago

    That sounds like a bad idea. Who gets to decide the “special circumstances”? It’s a slippery slope towards eugenics.

    • venusaur@lemmy.world
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      18 days ago

      Everybody always says eugenics and can’t fathom an in between. That’s like saying socialism is a slippery slope to communism.