October 26, 2003 - Dayton Daily News: Are Rapes and Assaults on the increase in the Peace Corps?

Peace Corps Online: Peace Corps News: Special Reports: October 26, 2003: Dayton Daily News reports on Peace Corps Safety and Security: What RPCVs Say about this series: October 26, 2003 - Dayton Daily News: Are Rapes and Assaults on the increase in the Peace Corps?

By Admin1 (admin) (pool-151-196-165-54.balt.east.verizon.net - 151.196.165.54) on Sunday, October 26, 2003 - 12:10 am: Edit Post

Are Rapes and Assaults on the increase in the Peace Corps?





"On a clear Christmas night near a moonlit stretch of Pacific beach, a man with a pistol came from the darkness and forced Diana Gilmour to watch two of her fellow Peace Corps volunteers being gang-raped while a male volunteer was pinned helpless on the ground," says this excerpt from the Dayton Daily News.


Read and comment on this story from the Dayton Daily News that says that reported assault cases involving Peace Corps volunteers increased over 100 percent from 1991-2002, while the number of volunteers increased by only 29 percent, according to the Peace Corps.

Reporters from the Dayton Daily News spent 20 months examining thousands of records on assaults on Peace Corps volunteers occurring around the world during the past four decades and discovered records from a never-before-released computer database that reported assault cases involving Peace Corps volunteers increased 125 percent from 1991-2002, while the number of volunteers increased by 29 percent. Last year, the number of assaults and robberies averaged one every 23 hours. The examination also found that young Americans — many just out of college and the majority of them women — are put in danger by fundamental practices of the Peace Corps that have remained unchanged for decades.

Is this an accurate picture of the Peace Corps? Are these occurrences widespread or are these isolated incidents? Is this reporting "fair and balanced" or is it a "witch hunt?" Read the story and the rest of the reports in coming days and leave your comments from your own personal experience at:


Mission of sacrifice*

* This link was active on the date it was posted. PCOL is not responsible for broken links which may have changed.



Mission of sacrifice

Peace Corps volunteers face injury, death in foreign lands

By Russell Carollo and Mei-Ling Hopgood

Dayton Daily News

AGUA FRIA, El Salvador |

On a clear Christmas night near a moonlit stretch of Pacific beach, a man with a pistol came from the darkness and forced Diana Gilmour to watch two of her fellow Peace Corps volunteers being gang-raped while a male volunteer was pinned helpless on the ground.

One of the men — his breath reeking of alcohol — raped Gilmour, too. Then the attackers herded the volunteers at gunpoint to a field of high grass where they feared they would be executed.

"I was constantly waiting to hear a shot in the dark," Gilmour said.

Suddenly another volunteer approached with a flashlight, and the attackers fled.

Seven months later in neighboring Guatemala, on July 2, 1997, the same two volunteers Gilmour had watched being gang-raped that Christmas night were walking from the Magic Place movie theater in downtown Guatemala City when they were attacked by another group of armed men intent on raping them. One of the women fled; the other was abducted and, for a second time in seven months, gang-raped while serving in the Peace Corps.

"They put a white T-shirt over my head and told me if I uncovered my face they would kill me," the 25-year-old volunteer said in a written statement filed in a Guatemalan court. "He put the end of the pistol in my mouth and cocked it, and I waited for them to kill me."

Six days after that incident, another Guatemala volunteer reported being raped. Twenty-seven days later, another. Twenty-nine days later, another.

Last year, Guatemala volunteers reported 11 assaults of all types, the largest number since the Peace Corps began collecting statistics in 1990, and the number this year is on pace to be even higher.

Records from a never-before-released computer database show that reported assault cases involving Peace Corps volunteers increased 125 percent from 1991-2002, while the number of volunteers increased by 29 percent, according to the Peace Corps. Last year, the number of assaults and robberies averaged one every 23 hours.

The Dayton Daily News spent 20 months examining thousands of records on assaults on Peace Corps volunteers occurring around the world during the past four decades.

Reporters interviewed more than 500 people in 11 countries and filed more than 75 Freedom of Information Act requests and appeals, obtaining thousands of documents and computer records made public for the first time. Many of the records were obtained in other countries, and others were released only after the newspaper sued the Peace Corps in U.S. District Court in Dayton.

The examination found that young Americans — many just out of college and the majority of them women — are put in danger by fundamental practices of the Peace Corps that have remained unchanged for decades.

Though many volunteers have little or no experience traveling outside the United States, minimum language skills and virtually no background in their assigned jobs, they are sent to live alone in remote areas of some of the world's most dangerous countries and left unsupervised for months at a time.



In 62 percent of the more than 2,900 assault cases since 1990, the victim was identified as being alone, according to a Daily News analysis of the Peace Corps’ Assault Notification and Surveillance System database. In 59 percent of assault cases, the victim was identified as a woman in her 20s.

"I am ready to go home. I don't like living in fear every single day," said Michelle Ervin of Buckeye Lake, Ohio, a 1998 University of Dayton graduate who was 25 when the Daily News visited her in the African country of Cape Verde in the summer of 2002. "Every day, I walk out of my house wondering who is going to rob me."

Volunteers frequently arrive at their sites fresh out of training without adequate housing or a job that keeps them busy. Some turn to drinking, using drugs, traveling to unsafe areas and engaging in other activities that put them in danger.

Nearly one in three assaults since 1999 involved alcohol, although the assailant was the only one drinking in some of those cases. Alcohol was linked to nearly one in six deaths since 1962, the Daily News analysis found.

The extent of the dangers faced by volunteers has been disguised for years, partly because the attacks occur thousands of miles away, partly because the agency has made little effort to publicize them, and partly because it has deliberately kept some people from finding out — while emphasizing the positive aspects of Peace Corps service.

Two top agency officials overseeing security over the last 12 years said they warned the Peace Corps about increased dangers to volunteers, but many of their concerns were ignored.

"Nobody wanted to talk about security. It suppresses the recruitment numbers," said Michael O'Neill, the Peace Corps' security director from 1995 to August 2002.

ONeill oversaw millions of dollars in security improvements, including hiring security personnel, buying satellite phones and backup generators and upgrading the security of physical facilities, including offices in foreign posts. But he said the agency ignored his suggestions to re-direct more funds into providing a more secure environment for volunteers in the field.

"I was the security guy. I said this isn't right. You're exposing volunteers and you're exposing the agency," he said.

In 1992, John S. Hale, then the acting inspector general for the Peace Corps, warned in a 43-page report to Congress of "a marked increase in violent acts against volunteers worldwide." Hale said he quit the Peace Corps after working on the report, in part because the agency ignored his warnings of the growing threat to volunteers.

"The idea was to basically return this (Peace Corps) to the land of myth and legacy — not to make sure that this was a good and effective agency that was doing good and keeping people safe," said Hale, whose duties included overseeing security. "People don't want to burst the myth of the culture."



In 10 cases examined by the newspaper, the Peace Corps misled or failed to provide essential details to families, the public or other volunteers about the circumstances of how volunteers died. Several families that lost relatives as many as 30 years ago learned critical details about the deaths from the Dayton Daily News.

"They wouldn't tell us nothing," said Paul Fink, who learned key details about the death of his 22-year-old sister from the Daily News 30 years after her body was found in a river in Zaire, now the Democratic Republic of the Congo.

After the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks, President Bush proposed doubling the number of Peace Corps volunteers, emphasizing a presence in Muslim countries. But spending bills now in Congress fall about $45 million short of the $359 million the administration said was needed for the agency to expand.

Peace Corps Director Gaddi H. Vasquez said his "number one priority" is the safety of the agency's 7,533 volunteers serving in 71 countries.

"We will not put a single volunteer in harm's way," Vasquez said. "We send volunteers only to countries and communities where they can serve safely, and we have systems in place to maximize their safety and security."

Asked about the Daily News analysis showing an increase in assault cases, Vasquez said, "The numbers that I've seen indicate that in the case of the major sexual assaults that the numbers have been down, particularly last year they were down."

Vasquez and other Peace Corps officials stressed that the agency has taken steps during the past few years to make volunteers safer, including reorganizing its safety personnel, providing more training and adding 80 new positions worldwide. The agency also reorganized its Web site to provide more detailed information on safety.

"We've been trending in the right direction," Vasquez said. "I have yet to have one single volunteer say to me, ‘You know, Mr. Director, can I pull you aside because I really don't think things are going in the right direction.’ ” Vasquez said Thursday he is resigning his position, effective Nov. 14, so he can return to California.

The mission of the Peace Corps is to foster world peace and friendship by helping other countries, by telling the world about Americans and by sharing the experience with other Americans. Most of the more than 350 volunteers interviewed by the Daily News, even assault victims, looked favorably on their service. Many felt it was the most significant experience in their lives, giving them a new understanding of the world and leaving them with a new appreciation for the opportunities in the United States.

George Stengren's service in Africa inspired him to teach high school in Harlem. After teaching business skills in the African country of Togo, Tiffany Arthur of Dayton is an analyst in international agricultural trade. Melissa McSwegin of Kettering, who just finished three years as a volunteer, is working to eradicate the debilitating illness known as Guinea Worm disease in Niger.

Other volunteers have gone on to public service, including Ohio Gov. Bob Taft and former U.S. Congressman Tony Hall of Dayton, who continues to champion the cause of hunger around the world as the ambassador to the United Nations’ food relief agencies.

Still, Peace Corps service has left dozens of volunteers with a lifetime of physical and emotional scars. More than 250 have died since 1961, including at least 20 who were murdered, at least 16 who committed suicide and several who died under mysterious circumstances. A volunteer in Bolivia has been missing since 2001.



"I thought the Peace Corps was different from a typical government entity," said Jennifer Petersen, who underwent about 10 facial surgeries during 2 1/2 years after she was beaten with a rock in the African country of Lesotho in 1998.

Petersen, who grew up on a cattle ranch in North Dakota and now lives in Austin, Texas, said she felt abandoned by the Peace Corps after returning to the United States. She doesn't recall being contacted by the agency to prosecute her attacker, who was never convicted.

"I was expecting some support from them," she said. "I got nothing."

That same year, Lesotho volunteers were evacuated amid growing violence and political instability, and the following year assault cases involving volunteers doubled. Peace Corps records show that from 1997-99, Lesotho had the second highest rate of serious assaults among Peace Corps' African countries, and in January 2000 a volunteer there was shot in the abdomen and nearly killed.

Harvey Ramseur, former country director and the highest-ranking Peace Corps official in Lesotho from 1994-1999, said he didn't remember the attack on Petersen.

"We didn't experience any instances where volunteers were necessarily in danger," he said.

IVORY COAST VIOLENCE ENDS IN VOLUNTEER'S DEATH

Kevin Leveille of Ventura, Calif., earned minimum wage delivering pizzas in high school but somehow found a way to donate money to homeless shelters and environmental causes.

Weeks after graduating with honors from Humboldt State University in California, Leveille joined the Peace Corps and was sent to the town of Tanda in the Ivory Coast, where he was burglarized as many as three times.

"Kevin had reported that to the Peace Corps, and he had reported it to the local police department," Kevin's father, Paul, said during an interview. "From what I understand, the Peace Corps didn't do anything."

On Feb. 5, 1998, Kevin was burglarized once more. This time he was beaten to death.

"If I had any idea what was going on, I would have been over there so fast," Paul Leveille said. "I didn't find this out until after he was murdered."

A 21-year-old refrigerator repairman Kevin had once helped was sentenced to life in prison for his murder. Two others were found not guilty.

Kevin's murder was among a string of tragedies involving his group of about 40 volunteers in the Ivory Coast.



Another volunteer attached to the group died in an automobile accident. One was raped. One was stalked for weeks and burglarized twice. One terminated her service after she was brought out of the country twice for medical emergencies. Two were in serious bus accidents, in which one of them was severely injured. Others were burglarized or robbed.

Still others, though not physically harmed, had problems, too.

As is the case with many volunteers, Kelly Callahan of Kettering said she arrived at her village, Kouassi-Eatearo, without a place to live. The mayor invited her to stay at his home and, said Callahan, also invited her to share his bed.

Sheva Nickravesh had a host family that stole from her, three dogs were mysteriously killed and she was harassed by someone banging on her roof at night. She fled her house one night when a man tried to break in, and another time a group of young boys harassed her, suggesting they could rape her.

Twice she came home to find spitting cobras in her house. Though she has no idea how they got inside, she suspects someone put them there.

"I was constantly letting the Peace Corps know that I didn't feel safe and what was going on," said Nickravesh of San Francisco. "I asked to be transferred to a different village early on, within the first three months that I was there, but they wouldn't do it. In retrospect, I probably should have left when I didn't feel safe in the beginning."

In July 1998, Kelley Hartlieb of Anchorage, Alaska, was walking along the beach near her motel in the city of Tabou when a man attempted to rape her.

"He just came right up and grabbed my dress and started flinging me around and punched me in the face and got me down on the sand," Hartlieb said. "He had a long vine of rope. He was telling me . . . he was going to use it to strangle me."

The Peace Corps sent Hartlieb to Washington, D.C., for medical and psychological treatment. She does not know if her attacker was caught. The Peace Corps initially showed her photographs of suspects, but she could not identify any of them. She said she heard nothing more about the investigation.

"I never got follow-up," she said.

Two months after Hartieb was sexually assaulted, another Ivory Coast volunteer was raped, Peace Corps records show.

"That particular group had a lot of things happen to them. It's almost uncanny," said Sachiko Goode, who as country director oversaw Peace Corps operations in the Ivory Coast. "I've got pictures embedded in my mind that will never leave.

"I had to identify the body (of Kevin Leveille). I had to help with the funeral arrangements," Goode said, choking back tears as she spoke on the telephone. "It lives with me in terms of every day for the rest of my life because of the things that happened."

Goode said she became aware of the other burglaries only after Kevin was murdered and that she didn't recall him asking for a site change. Generally, she said, a volunteer who gets burglarized several times wouldn't have trouble getting moved. Late last year, the Peace Corps pulled all of its volunteers out of Ivory Coast following fighting between government forces and rebel groups.



"If we knew in training that two of us would die and so many would be attacked and raped and stolen from, how many of us would have seen it through?" Hartlieb said. "It seems like the statistics are so high, there really should be more obligation from the administration to give some more talk of awareness of that kind of thing."





Why does Peace Corps say this story provides a "misleading picture?"?



July 5, 2003 - PCOL Exclusive: A Volunteer's Courage

Why did Peace Corps issue an "informational message" on October 18 that after numerous discussions with reporter Russell Carollo, they believe that this story in the Dayton Daily News "will provide a misleading picture of the Peace Corps and Peace Corps Volunteer service, particularly with respect to safety and security:"

Quote:

Based on numerous discussions with the reporter, we believe the upcoming series about Peace Corps by Russell Carollo, which is scheduled to run October 26th, will provide a misleading picture of the Peace Corps and Peace Corps Volunteer service, particularly with respect to safety and security. For example, Mr. Carollo indicated he would print that assaults and rapes have substantially increased in recent years. However, the facts are that Peace Corps data shows a significant decrease in the rate of major sexual assault events over the past six years as this type of assault event is down by more than 30 percent since 1997. As NPCA members know, Peace Corps has placed and continues to place its highest priority on the safety and security of Volunteers. Every Peace Corps director beginning with Sargent Shriver has maintained this focus and added training, procedures, and systems as region and world circumstances change. Utilizing this focus, and through its reporting and tracking systems, Peace Corps has achieved great successes in recent years in reducing major assault incidents and rapes. Unfortunately, we believe that this fact will not be represented in the article. We also understand that this story will argue that the world is too dangerous a place for Peace Corps Volunteers and will include selected and not representational anecdotes and incidents spanning the past 30 plus years. We also have great concerns about the intentions of the reporter, who stated to Kevin Quigley, among others, after Kevin informed Mr. Carollo of the many positive attributes of the Peace Corps, that many others have said the same thing. Mr. Carollo further stated that Peace Corps is an agency that has had nothing but good stories written about it over the past 40 years. He then said he was not interested in these positive remarks; he was interested in the problems.


Take a look at the story "Peace Corps Online" published earlier this year about the Health Care that Returned Volunteers receive in the United States for illnesses and injuries that occur during their service overseas and our recommendation that the Peace Corps find out how widespread this problem is and appoint a working group to study the problem and issue recommendations for solving it. Read the story that received over eighty posts and comments from RPCVs about a problem that the Peace Corps still has not addressed at:

July 5, 2003 - PCOL Exclusive: A Volunteer's Courage






Some postings on Peace Corps Online are provided to the individual members of this group without permission of the copyright owner for the non-profit purposes of criticism, comment, education, scholarship, and research under the "Fair Use" provisions of U.S. Government copyright laws and they may not be distributed further without permission of the copyright owner. Peace Corps Online does not vouch for the accuracy of the content of the postings, which is the sole responsibility of the copyright holder.

This story has been posted in the following forums: : Headlines; Safety and Security of Volunteers; Investigative Journalism

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By Admin1 (admin) (pool-151-196-165-54.balt.east.verizon.net - 151.196.165.54) on Thursday, October 30, 2003 - 2:00 pm: Edit Post

Do Peace Corps Practices leave Volunteers Vulnerable to Danger?





"The Peace Corps sends volunteers to countries with crime rates much higher than in the United States. Some risks are unavoidable. But the Daily News found the Peace Corps often puts volunteers in greater danger by placing them in unsafe areas, providing housing that isn't safe, failing to warn them not to travel to risky areas or leaving them alone for up to a year without visits from supervisors," says this excerpt from the Dayton Daily News.


Read and comment on this story from the Dayton Daily News that says that reported assault cases involving Peace Corps volunteers increased over 100 percent from 1991-2002, while the number of volunteers increased by only 29 percent, according to the Peace Corps.

Reporters from the Dayton Daily News spent 20 months examining thousands of records on assaults on Peace Corps volunteers occurring around the world during the past four decades and discovered records from a never-before-released computer database that reported assault cases involving Peace Corps volunteers increased 125 percent from 1991-2002, while the number of volunteers increased by 29 percent. Last year, the number of assaults and robberies averaged one every 23 hours. The examination also found that young Americans — many just out of college and the majority of them women — are put in danger by fundamental practices of the Peace Corps that have remained unchanged for decades.

Is this an accurate picture of the Peace Corps? Are these occurrences widespread or are these isolated incidents? Is this reporting "fair and balanced" or is it a "witch hunt?" Read the story and the rest of the reports in coming days and leave your comments from your own personal experience at:


PRACTICES LEAVE VOLUNTEERS VULNERABLE TO DANGER*

* This link was active on the date it was posted. PCOL is not responsible for broken links which may have changed.



PRACTICES LEAVE VOLUNTEERS VULNERABLE TO DANGER

With her hands tied behind her, Cheryl Perkins of Lyman, Maine, tried to escape from five men who had broken into her house in Tanzania.

"I tried to run out, and the guy kicked me in the collarbone neck area," she said. "I gave up and was lying on the floor still tied up."

The house was the fifth one she had moved to in the village of Peramiho, and the 1995 robbery was her third. One of the robbers was an auxiliary policeman who helped solve her previous robbery.

The Peace Corps sends volunteers to countries with crime rates much higher than in the United States. Some risks are unavoidable. But the Daily News found the Peace Corps often puts volunteers in greater danger by placing them in unsafe areas, providing housing that isn't safe, failing to warn them not to travel to risky areas or leaving them alone for up to a year without visits from supervisors.

An increasing percentage of the volunteers placed in these dangerous environments are those most vulnerable to assault: women.

In 1977, male volunteers outnumbered females about 2-to-1. Today, 60 percent of volunteers are women, and they make up 70 percent of all assault victims identified by the Peace Corps since 1990. The agency's inspector general told Congress in 2001 that the changing gender makeup "has potentially significant consequences."

Agency officials acknowledged they have no mandatory guidelines for how often supervisors should visit volunteers, or how many volunteers one person can supervise. Instead, decisions are left to individual country posts, which usually have an associate director visit each volunteer three times over two years.

Several inspector general reports criticize the agency for failing to adequately supervise volunteers and to provide secure housing.

An April 2002 report found that some managers in Russia were responsible for about 25 volunteers each, yet they averaged fewer than three days a month traveling to volunteer sites.



Michael O'Neill, the agency's former security director, said he found a country where one associate director was supervising 52 volunteers scattered across several islands. After he suggested more funds for supervision and other support services, O'Neill said, he was no longer asked to be the agency's contact with congressional investigators looking into volunteer safety.

"I didn't really have a lot of communication with Peace Corps," said Perkins, a volunteer in Tanzania from 1993-95. "I didn't have access to a phone. The only time I would speak with them was if they came to the village, which was once a year, or when I went to Dar es Salaam (the capital), which was a 12- to 14-hour bus trip.

"I was the first one to be in the village. They shouldn't have sent me. I was a young female sent to this village where there were no other volunteers....It wasn't a good situation."

A March 2001 inspector general's report found that the housing for 17 of 32 newly arriving volunteers in Mozambique didn't meet minimum Peace Corps safety and security standards. Some volunteers, the report said, had no housing at all and had to live in hotels.

That same month, a report from Romania noted similar problems: 53 percent of the volunteers said their housing was not inspected by anyone from the Peace Corps before they arrived. The U.S. General Accounting Office, the investigative arm of Congress, made similar findings in 2002 after visiting five other countries.

"The first year I really walked around in fear," said Cody Thornton of Orangeville, Utah, who changed residences seven times while a volunteer in Kazakhstan from 1999 to 2001.

Travea Ghee of Cincinnati, a volunteer in Ivory Coast from 1998 to 2000, said that after three months of training she was told to find her own way to her site, the village of Gnagbadougnoa.

"They basically said, ‘You're on your own,’ ” Ghee said.

The Peace Corps said in a written response to the Dayton Daily News that volunteers are believed to be safest when they're accepted by the communities where they serve. Pairing volunteers, the response says, "is not necessarily safer."

NO CONSEQUENCES

Two days after graduating from East Carolina University in Greenville, N.C., 25-year-old Peace Corps volunteer Steve Roberts left the United States for the first time.

Seven months later, he waited to die as four armed bandits raped his girlfriend in a park in Guatemala.

"They tied me up to a tree and then they took my friend, who was a girl, into the bushes a ways, about 20 feet, and then all four of them raped her. It was a nightmare. It was a national park at 9 o'clock on Christmas Eve in the daylight," Roberts said. "I could not see, but I could hear, you know, moaning. They would take turns watching me, even though I was tied to the tree, holding a machete to my head.

"I thought I was going to die."



Eight months after the December 2000 attack, Roberts saw the photographs of two carjackers in a newspaper and identified them as two of the men who robbed him and raped his girlfriend, an employee at the Canadian Embassy in Guatemala City. In early 2002, Roberts and the woman identified the two men at a prison in Guatemala.

"We both identified them separately," said Roberts, who was transferred to the neighboring country of Belize after he identified the men. "I was told they were going to be kept in prison until the trial."

Roberts and a number of other volunteers said that their attackers escaped punishment and that the agency never kept them informed about their cases.

Though the Peace Corps has no authority to prosecute people in foreign countries, it can and has pressured foreign prosecutors and hired local attorneys to represent volunteers. Without such assistance, cases can easily be forgotten in third world criminal justice systems, and other volunteers are put at risk — not only from the same attackers but also from the perception that attacking volunteers comes without consequences.

Police, prosecutors and judges in developing countries, where crime is many times greater than in the United States, frequently lack the training, equipment and sometimes the will to spend months or years pursuing a single case. Bringing volunteers back from the United States to testify is difficult, and sometimes the Peace Corps doesn't pursue such cases.

The Peace Corps also has no written policies requiring that volunteers who are victimized by crime be notified about the processing of criminal charges against their attackers.

Chad DuMond was shot in the stomach and nearly died from his injuries more than three years ago in the Lesotho capital of Maseru, but he has yet to be interviewed about the attack by a Peace Corps investigator. "That was something I was really angry about for about a year or a year and a half: not having any follow-up" investigation, DuMond said.

Steve Roberts for years asked about the men who tied him to a tree and raped his girlfriend in Guatemala.

"I wanted to put those guys behind bars," he said. "I didn't hear anything in April (2002). I didn't hear anything in May. In June, I pressed, and they said, ‘Oh, well, you know, these things take time.’...I've been sort of forgotten about."

Country Director Charles Reilly agreed to speak to a Daily News reporter at his office in Guatemala City, but when the reporter showed up, one of his assistants said Reilly didn't have permission to speak.

In December 2002, two years after the attack, Reilly sent an e-mail to Roberts saying that authorities "just sat on the evidence and did nothing," according to a copy of the e-mail provided by Roberts.

"I don't know whether we can get financing anymore. . . . Probably not," Reilly wrote. "I don't know whether I can get Peace Corps to authorize either a Justice Department lawyer or more money for (a legal adviser)."

In February 2003, Reilly wrote to Roberts again, saying he was "wrestling with Peace Corps" to get funds for a new case: a January 2003 rape and abduction involving two female volunteers in Guatemala.

"I have reminded Peace Corps-Washington that safety and security for the Peace Corps volunteers includes keeping thugs in jail, but they have been unresponsive, especially to your case," Reilly wrote. "So it doesn't look good."

SECRECY MASKS DANGER TO VOLUNTEERS

Blood ran down the face of 24-year-old Mindy Day Hodges of Los Angeles, as her attacker continued to beat her on a street in Bamako, the capital of Mali.

He started undoing his belt and lifted her dress. She was able to escape.

A Peace Corps official in Mali wanted to keep the 1997 assault on Hodges "in-house" and initially didn't notify the U.S. embassy, according to a handwritten Peace Corps document obtained after the Daily News filed a lawsuit against the agency.

The Peace Corps kept information on many assaults and deaths from the public, from families and from its own volunteers, while emphasizing the more positive aspects of service.

The families of some volunteers learned details about the deaths of their relatives through the Daily News, which obtained the information in other countries or from Peace Corps documents.

Several volunteers in El Salvador and Guatemala said they were not told about the 1996 Christmas rapes or warned to stay away from that area.

"I think part of it was they didn't want to call attention on the part of the American public to the risks volunteers take for fear of, I think, Congress looking disfavorably on the Peace Corps," said Tony Gasbarro of Fairbanks, Alaska, who was presented a Peace Corps service award this year by former President Carter for his work in El Salvador. "I just felt that we should be informed as to what happened, just for the sake of our own security."

More than three weeks after the Christmas rapes, the Peace Corps issued a press release announcing the arrests of six people "in connection with an armed robbery and assault." The release doesn't mention that anyone was raped.

Though the Peace Corps hasn't always kept the public informed, the agency and the State Department closely monitored what the media reported about assaults on volunteers.

When a newspaper in Guatemala published a story about a 1997 abduction that resulted in a rape there, the State Department vowed to "raise the issue of the leak" with Guatemala officials, according to department records.



Following a court hearing concerning an April 23, 1998, rape of a volunteer in Macedonia, a Peace Corps document reports: "There was no press or news reporters present in the court session, and thus far has been no query to either the Peace Corps offices or to the U.S. Embassy about this case. There was no press coverage in today's newspapers.

"I think this is perhaps the best we can hope for."

In 1999, when an alleged assault in Kherson, Ukraine, generated negative publicity for the Peace Corps, agency officials instructed volunteers to "not discuss this situation with the media," and to ask the victim not to make any public statements.

The incident, according to Ukraine police, involved two volunteers taken into custody after they got off a train drunk, laughing and cursing as one of them fell to the ground at the city's main station. A male volunteer reported that police raped him, an allegation that angered Ukraine authorities, who declined to file charges despite pressure from the U.S. Embassy in Ukraine.

Following an article in a Ukraine newspaper, the agency tried to determine "which Peace Corps volunteer provided input" to the article.

Authorities in Ukraine, under Communist control only 12 years ago, were not as secretive as the Peace Corps. Authorities in three Ukraine cities provided access to records to the Daily News, and police in Kherson allowed a reporter to review their files on the case and provided copies.

"Ukraine is a democratic country," Kherson's chief of the regional police department said after agreeing to grant an American reporter full access to his files. "The press is free. We have nothing to hide."

FORGOTTEN VOLUNTEERS FAIL TO FIND SUPPORT

Kristy Lord of Whitinsville, Mass., couldn't breathe as the taxi driver pinned her against the back seat on a rural road outside of Sucre, Bolivia, on Feb. 28, 1999.

"He had his hands over my face and nose," said Lord, who was a 26-year-old recent college graduate. "I was scared to get out of the car because there were cliffs on either side, and he said he would throw me over and nobody would ever find me."

Lord said the taxi driver then raped her.

Eight months later, the Peace Corps quit pursuing her attacker. But it didn't quit pursuing Lord, compiling report after report — documenting her parents' marital status, her mother's prescription medication, the volunteer's fear of walking alone at night — before using the more than 100 pages of records to expel her from the Peace Corps following her affair with a married teacher.

"I was crying. I felt like I had already survived this. . . .I only had a few months left," said Lord, now a case manager with an agency that assists people with AIDS in Rochester, N.Y. "I was sent home without my belongings, without saying goodbye to close friends and counterparts, and without money."

The Peace Corps has an international reputation for helping the less fortunate people of the world, but among some volunteers who have been raped, robbed, injured or stricken with life-threatening illnesses, its image is one of an agency that doesn't care.

Fearing for her safety following a threat, Christina Hildebrandt of Longmont, Colo., decided to leave the African country of Gabon in June 1991.

"I started sleeping with a machete next to my bed," she said. "At this point I said, ‘What am I doing here?’ ”

The Peace Corps, she said, refused to pay the $1,200 for the plane ticket home, so she paid it herself. Her boyfriend, now her husband, sued the Peace Corps to get the money back but the suit was dismissed.

"If they were in more of a compassionate mood, maybe they would have paid," she said.



After her face was disfigured during a 1998 attack in Africa, Jennifer Petersen said she had to "beg" the agency for a ride to the airport. She found out later that her injuries meant she would be terminated from the Peace Corps and forced to depend on federal workers' compensation to pay her medical bills. "When I got back to the states, I went to Minneapolis, where I began two and a half years of reconstructive surgery," she said. "Peace Corps was out of the picture almost immediately. They sent my file to the Department of Labor, and from then on I was claim number 250535."

After she was raped in the taxi in Bolivia, Kristy Lord was sent to live alone in the village of Novillero, where she had no telephone service, no radio and where most of the children she was supposed to teach couldn't understand the only foreign language the Peace Corps taught her: Spanish. In Novillero, Lord said, she began a brief affair with a married teacher.

Eight months after the rape and months after Lord said she ended the affair, the Peace Corps expelled her for "adjustment disorder with disturbance of conduct."

"Her adjustment disorder is also related to her experience of moving to a new site as a volunteer and being unable to tolerate the loneliness there without involving herself in a self-destructive relationship," a Peace Corps psychologist wrote.

A taxi driver Lord initially identified as her attacker was eliminated as a suspect, and records show that neither the Peace Corps nor police pursued other suspects.

Bolivia Country Director Meredith Smith said she decided to withdraw the agency's support from the investigation because she believed that Bolivian authorities would not look favorably on Lord's relationship with the married man.

"No matter how that seems to us in the United States, that was their attitude," said Smith, who taught nutrition at Kansas State University and acknowledged having no background in law enforcement.

Although she believed that Lord was raped, Smith said she questioned the volunteer's actions after getting into the cab.

"She had plenty of chances to escape and stayed with this guy in the taxi," Smith said. "She may have thought that was a really neat guy she had met and, you know, maybe he would be somebody interesting to date. I don't really know. I don't know what was going on in her mind."

Smith said she sent Lord home because her behavior with men put her in danger.

"I didn't want her raped again,” she said.

Since the attack on Lord, eight other volunteers were assaulted in or next to taxis in Bolivia, and at least three of them were abducted.

"IT SHOULD HAVE NEVER HAPPENED."

The Christmas rapes in El Salvador left Diana Gilmour with terrifying memories.

"I had night terrors where I'd be awake and I'd be sure someone was in my parents' bedroom killing them," she said. "I know it was straight out of that fear that I had of knowing somebody was nearby that I cared about and not knowing if they were alive or dead."

Gilmour until recently worked as a speech therapist, helping children with autism and other problems. She didn't want the state where she lives identified, but both Gilmour and her fiance agreed she should speak publicly about what happened in order to protect other volunteers.

Gilmour, one of three volunteers raped in El Salvador on Christmas Day 1996, questioned why the Peace Corps allowed female volunteers to travel to such a dangerous area or why it allowed a volunteer, Tom Luben, to be stationed there. "We told them we were going to Tom Luben's site," Gilmour said. "They knew where we were going. You have to fill out an itinerary."

Luben, who declined to be interviewed, was stationed in Agua Fria, a remote village of a dozen or so families. Though the village is only about eight miles down the coast from the popular tourist beach of El Cuco, the only way in is a narrow dirt road littered with holes and large rocks; along the road, men — young and old — walk with machetes in their hands or strapped to their waists.

Strangers, especially foreigners, are easily recognized along this road, and the volunteers who were assaulted weren't hard to spot: Several rode for miles atop a bus. Word spread in the tiny community that Americans were in the area, as the volunteers spent the days swimming and the nights lighting bonfires on the beach.

Asked if he had ever seen an American woman at Agua Fria before, Nicolas Rivera, standing in his front yard overlooking the one-room house where Luben once lived, said, "Nunca (Never)."

After the civil war ended in 1992, criminals roamed El Salvador armed with military assault rifles, grenades and semiautomatic pistols as crime rose to "crisis proportions," said a State Department document. Rural areas like Agua Fria became especially dangerous because they lacked adequate police protection and communication.

"Of course none of us had any clue as to how dangerous it was," Gilmour said. "We were never warned about going to El Salvador. . . . My uncle works for the foreign service, and he was shocked we went down there."

"It should have never happened."

Both a prosecutor and police officers said the area is a well-known haven for criminals.

"We didn't realize it was dangerous at the time," said Meredith Smith, the former country director in Bolivia who was acting country director in Guatemala when the Christmas rapes occurred. "When that incident happened, we realized that a group of volunteers together would attract people."

During an interview earlier this year, El Salvador Country Director Mike Wise said no other volunteers had been stationed there.

Because Gilmour didn't want to return to Guatemala and complete her service, she said, the Peace Corps refused to pay her the $2,000 to $3,000 volunteers receive at the end of their service.

"It was technically their fault that it happened, and I got nothing. I got 400 bucks," she said. "When I got that check, my mother was livid. She was absolutely livid. My parents had to support me."



Six men were arrested for the Christmas rapes. At least three were convicted on charges of aggravated rape and sentenced to the maximum penalty of 30 years. During interviews at a prison near San Salvador, two continued to deny their guilt. The Peace Corps, Gilmour said, gave her little information about the case. "I didn't even know they got convicted," she said. "I found out nothing."

The Peace Corps did, however, continue to correspond with her.

"They actually sent me postcards asking me to speak on behalf of the Peace Corps and try to recruit people," she said, adding that she refused. "No way. I was telling people to be careful. I was like: ‘It could be the best experience of your life, but it could also be the worst.’ ”

Elliot Jaspin, Ken McCall and Christine Willmsen contributed to this story.

[From the Dayton Daily News: 10.26.2003]

Copyright © 2003, Cox Ohio Publishing. All rights reserved.
By using DaytonDailyNews.com, you accept the terms of our
visitor agreement and privacy policy.



Why does Peace Corps say this story provides a "misleading picture?"



July 5, 2003 - PCOL Exclusive: A Volunteer's Courage

Why did Peace Corps issue an "informational message" on October 18 that after numerous discussions with reporter Russell Carollo, they believe that this story in the Dayton Daily News "will provide a misleading picture of the Peace Corps and Peace Corps Volunteer service, particularly with respect to safety and security:"

Quote:

Based on numerous discussions with the reporter, we believe the upcoming series about Peace Corps by Russell Carollo, which is scheduled to run October 26th, will provide a misleading picture of the Peace Corps and Peace Corps Volunteer service, particularly with respect to safety and security. For example, Mr. Carollo indicated he would print that assaults and rapes have substantially increased in recent years. However, the facts are that Peace Corps data shows a significant decrease in the rate of major sexual assault events over the past six years as this type of assault event is down by more than 30 percent since 1997. As NPCA members know, Peace Corps has placed and continues to place its highest priority on the safety and security of Volunteers. Every Peace Corps director beginning with Sargent Shriver has maintained this focus and added training, procedures, and systems as region and world circumstances change. Utilizing this focus, and through its reporting and tracking systems, Peace Corps has achieved great successes in recent years in reducing major assault incidents and rapes. Unfortunately, we believe that this fact will not be represented in the article. We also understand that this story will argue that the world is too dangerous a place for Peace Corps Volunteers and will include selected and not representational anecdotes and incidents spanning the past 30 plus years. We also have great concerns about the intentions of the reporter, who stated to Kevin Quigley, among others, after Kevin informed Mr. Carollo of the many positive attributes of the Peace Corps, that many others have said the same thing. Mr. Carollo further stated that Peace Corps is an agency that has had nothing but good stories written about it over the past 40 years. He then said he was not interested in these positive remarks; he was interested in the problems.


Take a look at the story "Peace Corps Online" published earlier this year about the Health Care that Returned Volunteers receive in the United States for illnesses and injuries that occur during their service overseas and our recommendation that the Peace Corps find out how widespread this problem is and appoint a working group to study the problem and issue recommendations for solving it. Read the story that received over eighty posts and comments from RPCVs about a problem that the Peace Corps still has not addressed at:

July 5, 2003 - PCOL Exclusive: A Volunteer's Courage




Some postings on Peace Corps Online are provided to the individual members of this group without permission of the copyright owner for the non-profit purposes of criticism, comment, education, scholarship, and research under the "Fair Use" provisions of U.S. Government copyright laws and they may not be distributed further without permission of the copyright owner. Peace Corps Online does not vouch for the accuracy of the content of the postings, which is the sole responsibility of the copyright holder.

This story has been posted in the following forums: : Headlines; Safety and Security of Volunteers; Investigative Journalism

PCOL8282
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By Katherine Parker (gw236.carlson.com - 168.97.133.236) on Saturday, December 27, 2003 - 12:03 pm: Edit Post

I found the article in the Dayton Daily News disturbing, to say the least. I served in the Peace Corps in Belize from 1995 to 1997, and we were never notified of the attacks in El Salvador and Guatemala in 1996. In fact, any risk to volunteers was downplayed. I mean, we had the standard safety talk, you know - stay in groups, watch out for pick-pocketers, etc. But we were never told about any attacks or fatalities. Around 1994/1995, PCV's in Belize lost the privilege to own motorcycles, and the explanation provided was that some PCV in far-off Africa had hurt himself. That was it. That was the only mention of our fellow PCV's human frailities. We WANTED to believe that with so many volunteers serving across the globe, that one motorcycle accident was the extent of our injuries. That was probably naive of us, but to intentionally conceal information about rapes, assaults and murders? How scary, considering how much traveling we PCV's in Belize did. How many of us camped on that beach near Agua Fria, or went shopping in Guatemala? And I sensed the volunteers in Guatemala were not any more informed than we were in Belize, or the topic would have certainly come up when we hung-out together. I'm also guessing that none of the other Central American PCV's were told about our PCV that was tied-up at gunpoint in his village home, robbed, and struck in the head with the butt of a rifle. I enjoyed my time in the Peace Corps, and recommend it as a wonderful experience to anyone interested. And although the median age in our Peace Corps batch was a fairly young 26, all volunteers ARE adults, and deserve the facts. All the facts. I think with the right measures, recruitment won't decrease - it might even INCREASE, as parents and volunteers feel more empowered about where their potential PCV can be posted. It's OKAY to suggest that single female PCV's be posted to the cities and towns, rather than remote villages. It's OKAY to suggest that single people of either gender stationed in a country live with a roommate. It's OKAY to encourage Country Directors to get out from behind their desks, and investigate the sites where their PCV's are living. It's VERY OKAY to share with PCV's when one of their peers in a neighboring country is hurt, so we can make educated decisions about when and where to travel.

By Daniel (0-1pool136-106.nas12.somerville1.ma.us.da.qwest.net - 63.159.136.106) on Sunday, December 28, 2003 - 9:41 pm: Edit Post

Thanks Katherine,

Daniel

By daniel (0-1pool136-39.nas12.somerville1.ma.us.da.qwest.net - 63.159.136.39) on Monday, December 29, 2003 - 7:51 am: Edit Post

When will it be required to have two volunteers at every site? They won't do it. 86% of the people who were victims of violence were alone during their attack. No, all you former Peace Corps volunteers who had great experiences are a false witnesses when it comes to being harassed, threatened, raped or assaulted. That is a fact.

When you blame other volunteers who you have served with for being attacked you disserve Peace Corps and demonstrate the selfish nature Peace Corps procures with these types of attitudes. Another thing you do is try to diminsh the true experiences of volunteers who have gone through these situations. By doing so, you help the rapist, you help the pretator or perpetrator of violence and threats.

These are the facts:

1. Peace Corps refuses to pair volunteers in the face of the staggering numbers of victims of violence who were alone at the time of their attack. Don't let them bull--- you when saying they don't have the resources. They have allocations for millions more in trying to get you to serve alone. They should be using that money for pairing volunteers and making Peace Corps a more quality orientated program and safe.

2. Medical Cover UP: Their own inspector general pointed out Peace Corps didn't distinguish between safety incidents and medical services until 1998. What happened to those volunteers who fell between the cracks? Did you cover up their cases. Yes, Peace Corps did and continue to do it today. We haven't gotten a phone call to repair the damage done.

3. NO Lawyer : We need a lawyer to work for volunteers to protect them from administrative officials who choose to be false witnesses to our experiences with Peace Corps. Peace Corps has a team of approximately 7 lawyers working for them. Why doesn't the Peace Corps volunteer, who is the program have one working for them. Why? Because there is a system to fire people, cast people's service in false light through Medical services and other offices at Peace Corps. You have no rights unless you have 300 dollars an hour for a Federal Attorney. Peace Corps knows this an manipulates cases of volunteers who have been hurt by their system. They will even use administrators like Mark Gearan and Gaddi Vasquez to put your case down. They didn't even serve and wouldn't have a clue. Even some of the lawyers at Peace Corps have not served in the field, but they protect the agency. You have to question a person who knows their is wrong doing but protects the Peace Corps firing of "People" whimsically and abitrarily. When you lie about people's real experiences you make Peace Corps unsafe to the perpetrators.

4. Medical Services Reform and Federal Employment Compensation: Peace Corps fails in providing necessary health care, career development and positive recommendations to its Veterans. When are experiences are adminstered by people who use false witness techniques we don't get the health care and jobs after service because of vindicative former employees and former volunteers who try to interfer and lie about our concerns.

I have and more will be writing soon. I have to go lump 20,000 pounds of furniture today because Peace Corps has discriminated against me and my family. With my Masters in International Development, I lump furniture. You know why because I reported an incident of being threatened at my site, one night. Peace Corps has lied about me since. I will fight back every day until I get justice. I don't care how high I have to take it.

There are many of us like this. We will get our rights back to work without discrimination or having false witness administrators at Peace Corps try to lie to the American public.


I will say this. From my experience, Peace Corps uses reprisal and discrimination against me in working with USAID contractors, as a Peace Corps administrator, or for that matter any organization in international development. Approximately, 75% percent of the International Development work force are former volunteers and they won't interview you because they have heard you spoke out against their unsafe practices, negligent health system and discrimination through General Counsel.


Remember this director didn't serve in a hut in Africa.


We won't stop until there is justice in all our cases.

The Jane articles won't stop, the GAO reports won't stop, the court cases won't stop, the Dayton daily news won't stop, the Congressional Hearings won't stop until you really listen.

Recently, a former Boston Globe reporter asked me what happened? I explained. I said I reported a safety incident at my site. "You see how the Peace Corps will try to shut you up".

One injustice to one person is an injustice to us all. Martin Luther King.


Chew on that callous administrators.

Daniel

By daniel (0-1pool136-23.nas12.somerville1.ma.us.da.qwest.net - 63.159.136.23) on Thursday, January 22, 2004 - 9:19 am: Edit Post

Yes, they have increased 125% percent and since the early 1990's versus other decades. What have they done for these Veterans of Peace Corps. Nothing.

By CJMargulis (stovokor.wellsfargo.com - 159.37.7.254) on Tuesday, March 09, 2004 - 3:22 pm: Edit Post

The Peace Corps is a vital ambassadorial function for the United States. There is no reason why the security of these dynamic young ambassadors shouldn't merit the same level of attention as protecting our nation's diplomatic ambassadors. Security can and should involve employment of locals, who are properly vetted in country to ensure they provide the level of professional security required for PCVs. We cannot afford to endanger the safety, and the lives of volunteer with a cavalier or complacent attitude to their security. The volunteers will be better able to fulfill their mission, in fact, if we can provide the type of security that serves to increase their capacity to operate effectively in dangerous environments and provides them security that inspires confidence in their mission, and in the cause for which they volunteer.

By Fred Werner, Bolivia 95-97 (132.236.251.33) on Tuesday, May 11, 2004 - 11:54 am: Edit Post

I often say that one of the top reasons that I was glad I chose Peace Corps when looking for ways to work overseas, is because my entire time in service, I felt like Peace Corps had me covered. When I got dangerously sick, I checked myself into a hospital and knew I would get decent treatment. Once, Peace Corps flew out a helicopter to rescue the visiting girlfriend of a fellow PCV, after she fell off a bridge. Back home in DC, I met several PCVs who were on medevac, all of whom seemed to appreciate getting good treatment and follow-up.

So the charges raised in these articles are very serious. Even if they are only a small minority of cases (are they?), they are shameful and damaging. Heads should roll and PC policies should be clarified or changed. No PCV should be blamed for a rape or assault against her, even if she put herself in a dangerous position. No PCV should be denied their ticket home or their readjustment allowance if they decide to leave after an assault. No PCV, esp. no female PCV should be stationed alone unless they specifically request to be (In Bolivia, they told us that was the policy). Every victim of any assault should have at least some follow-up to see what their concerns are. PC should also follow up with the US embassy in every assault case to make sure that maximum pressure is brought to get cases prosecuted. And PC should be MUCH more open with volunteers especially regarding incidents when they happen. We are adults, please treat us that way. When a reporter says he had far less trouble getting info from a corrupt former Soviet government than he did from PC, that is a sign that something is REALLY wrong at PCHQ.

There are inherent dangers in most parts of the world, and PC shouldn't stop sending volunteers to places out of exagerated fears. But, PC needs to be MUCH more open and consistent about giving volunteers information and options, and making sure that NO volunteer gets left hanging when they need help.

By JEN PO (cache-rtc-aa04.proxy.aol.com - 152.163.100.8) on Wednesday, January 19, 2005 - 1:38 pm: Edit Post

I THINK I MAY WANT TO BE A PC BUT HEARING THESE COMMMENTS IM NOT SO SURE. ARE THERE ANY SAFER PLACES TO GO. I WANT TO HELP CHILDREN TO READ BECAUSE I LOVE KIDS. BUT I WANT TO DO THIS WITH OTHER PEOPLE, IN A GROUP. I DONT WANT TO BE LEFT ALONE. I WANT TO HELP OUT THE WORLD AND GIVE BACK. THERE ARE A LOT OF PEOPLE WHO COULD USE HELP, JUST LOOK AT THIS WORLD LIFE COUNTER: http://www.secretsituation.com/geo/graphic1.htm . PLEASE HELP ME GET ALL THE FACTS BEFORE I MAKE THIS CHOICE.

By daniel (ca1462-ch01-bl01.ma-cambridg0.sa.earthlink.net - 207.69.137.200) on Saturday, May 21, 2005 - 10:17 am: Edit Post

Jen Po,

I encourage you to join, but will give you real facts about how to be a good helper in aiding against poverty but to protect yourself too during service. 978-462-3868

Daniel

By Anonymous (ool-18bcadb5.dyn.optonline.net - 24.188.173.181) on Friday, October 14, 2005 - 1:35 am: Edit Post

PEACE CORPS SUCK ASS AND ALL THE OFFICIALS WHO WONT DO ANYTHING TO IMPROVE THE SAFETY OF VOLENTEER SHOULD BE COLD BLOODEDLY MURDERED. PLAIN AND SIMPLE. I CANT BELEIEVE I WAS GOING TO JOIN, THANK GOD I CAME ACROSS THIS SITE.

By Prospective PCV (user-0c8h319.cable.mindspring.com - 24.136.140.41) on Wednesday, November 30, 2005 - 2:39 pm: Edit Post

I'm also confused. I have been thinking about Peace Corps for a long time but also having reservations for a long time. Recently I spoke with former PC volunteers at a PC Recruiter-organized social, and I left feeling that I was almost positive it was something I wanted to do, and that I would not have to be overly concerned about my safety. Based on the volunteers' experiences, the PC was extremely cautious. However, the Dayton Daily News article has made me rethink my decision to apply. With a background in French, it is likely that I would be placed in Africa. As much as I would love to go, a past experience of sexual assault makes me extremely nervous to enter into a situation where it is likely that I would be attacked in my home or on my way home, or somewhere else where I should feel secure. What exactly are the statistics, the bottom line, and any advice? I have traveled and lived alone before, but never in a third-world country.

By Anonymous (pool-162-83-229-176.ny5030.east.verizon.net - 162.83.229.176) on Wednesday, April 19, 2006 - 3:39 pm: Edit Post

I was a female Peace Corps volunteer in El Salvador from 2000-2002 and was well aware of the dangers in the country. On our first day in country we were told of every horrible incident that had happened to volunteers in both El Salvador and Guatemala. The first story they told us in detail was the "Christmas rapes". We were strictly forbidden from even visiting the beach where these rapes happened, and if we did we would be kicked out of the Peace Corps.
In our first week in country two volunteers left because they were so scared from all of the briefings we had recieved from Peace Corps and the US embassy. El Salvador is an extremely dangerous country and I felt at risk almost daily living there, but Peace Corps made sure I was aware of those dangers; it was ultimately my decision to be and stay there.
Additionally, Peace Corps tried to place volunteers together in sites but the majority of volunteers wanted to be alone, including myself. Even though it was a very scarey time in my life, it was also a wonderful time and I wouldn't exchange it for anything.

By Considering (h78-39.state.id.us - 164.165.78.39) on Wednesday, May 17, 2006 - 5:40 pm: Edit Post

I have spent much time abroad even spent most of last year living in South Korea and am soon to leave for guide work in Spain. I am aware of risks while out of the comfort zone of the US and still don't sit home. I study and educate myself about an area before going to be respectful of another's culture while managing my best interests and security.

I wish to represent my country well, effect change in the world, and want to know that I am working for an organization that will also support me while working for them. The PC would do well to be upfront with volunteers and allow potential applicants the opportunity to be objective and consider their options. Their recruitment methods and closed approach to information seems to resemble too closely that of the US military.

I am still persuing the possibility and would like to thank the writers of this article for creating a better balanced perspective of the agency for those still in research phase.

By Potential (h78-39.state.id.us - 164.165.78.39) on Wednesday, May 17, 2006 - 5:39 pm: Edit Post

I have spent much time abroad even spent most of last year living in South Korea and am soon to leave for guide work in Spain. I am aware of risks while out of the comfort zone of the US and still don't sit home. I study and educate myself about an area before going to be respectful of another's culture while managing my best interests and security.

I wish to represent my country well, effect change in the world, and want to know that I am working for an organization that will also support me while working for them. The PC would do well to be upfront with volunteers and allow potential applicants the opportunity to be objective and consider their options. Their recruitment methods and closed approach to information seems to resemble too closely that of the US military.

I am still persuing the possibility and would like to thank the writers of this article for creating a better balanced perspective of the agency for those still in research phase.

By safety (ca03-ch02-bl03.ca-sanfranc0.sa.earthlink.net - 207.69.139.145) on Thursday, May 18, 2006 - 3:43 am: Edit Post

To prospective volunteer,

The recruiter will tell you anything. They want you to join. They did not go through a safety incident most of the time during their service. They have a job don't they? Well, the people who went through safety incidents ,don't, usually because of the discrimination within the agency. The dead volunteers can't even apply for a job.

Though Peace Corps can be a great experience. Make sure they place you with another volunteer in your given village. Tell if they don't you won't go. Its safest thing to do for yourself. Remember Peace Corps wants to cover as much ground in a country and you are the "volunteer". Make sure you tell them and make sure they know you are a volunteer not a sitting duck.

Also, if you think you are going to get funded during your service for a project, make sure you tell them beforehand and keep them on notice about it. Volunteer pay was increased a couple of years ago because of our advocacy behind the scenes. Supporting you with funds is support at your site. Many people feel different. I feel you have to let them know and set up alternatives before service. Like Rotary funding or an organization like that.

Know your rights before service.

The Inspector General's office at Peace Corps is the investigative arm of internal Peace Corps.

General Counsel are the lawyers running the agency.

Meet your Congress man or woman before service and let them know you are going to Peace Corps. They are your only representation if you have a conflict with the agency during or after service.

By Anonymous (164.82.84.3) on Wednesday, September 06, 2006 - 5:25 pm: Edit Post

The Peace Corps need to stop sending peoples to these countries where the military forces and police forces are totally corrupt. They can't control their citizens let alone the criminal element. The intentions of the Peace Corps of the 1960's has gone down the tube. These countries are dangerous. They know that. What with terrorism and narco-terrorism. The drug trade are the only means. Young men of these countries can make a living.


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