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KENYA: Health workers grappling
with conflict-related sexual violence
January 15, 2008 - (IRIN) As Kenya counts the
human and material cost of the political violence, hospitals are
reporting an increase in reported rapes during the immediate post-election
period, spurring the government and health organisations to find
ways to treat these cases as well as protect the displaced from
further incidents of sexual violence.
"In the first two days of the violence, 56
people were treated for rape and admitted; there are so many other
victims back in the slums who have not received any medical attention,"
Lucy Kiama, chief nurse at the Nairobi Women's Hospital, which specialises
in sexual violence, told IRIN.
She added that the number of rape survivors seeking
treatment at the facility had doubled during the violence. Many
women who came to the hospital, she added, reported that there were
many more in the slums who had failed to seek treatment because
of security reasons or fear of stigmatisation.
Political unrest erupted in many parts of Kenya
on 30 December 2007, immediately after the Electoral Commission
of Kenya declared incumbent President Mwai Kibaki the winner of
the election held on 27 December. Kibaki's main challenger, Raila
Odinga, rejected the result and claimed he won the election, alleging
it was rigged in Kibaki's favour.
The UN estimates the violence has led to the displacement
of 250,000 people across the country, many of whom are living in
hastily assembled camps. Health workers have also expressed concern
that women and children remain at risk of sexual attacks in these
poorly protected camps, especially given that the referral systems
that would exist normally to handle sex attacks have broken down.
"Women and children were raped, men and boys
as well … it is still taking place in the camps because of
the large numbers of displaced people," said Florence Gachanja,
national programme officer for the UN Population Fund, UNFPA.
According to Jeanne Ward, an international consultant
on gender-based violence, it is crucial that protective measures
such as lighting and separate latrines for men and women be set
up in the camps to prevent further attacks.
She noted that in emergency situations where the
infrastructure breaks down, women and girls tend to be put at increased
risk of violence, particularly sexual violence.
"These sexual attacks may be crimes of opportunism,
where people take advantage of the breakdown of normal protection
mechanisms to rape, or in cases where the war pits one group against
another, such as ethnic violence, the rapes may be targeted at one
particular group of women and girls," she said, noting that
in Kenya's case, it was too early to tell whether the rapes were
gratuitous or targeted, although investigations had begun."Sexual
violence has immediate consequences for the physical and psychological
health of the survivor; for instance, they need to have access to
post-exposure prophylactic [PEP] kits to prevent them from contracting
HIV," she added. "Where people are displaced, it is vital
that they know where to go in case they are attacked and that they
receive psycho-social post-trauma care."
Taking action
The government and NGOs have begun to respond to the situation,
with UNFPA providing PEP kits to medical centres through the Kenya
Red Cross Society and other NGOs, and larger hospitals setting up
satellite centres in badly affected areas to provide a minimum service
to the injured, including people who have suffered sexual attacks.
The Nairobi Women's Hospital, in collaboration
with the Psychological Association of Kenya, has opened counselling
centres in the slum areas of Mathare, Huruma and Kibera, the areas
worst-affected by violence in the capital.
The hospital has appealed to counsellors to volunteer
their services for victims of sexual violence among internally displaced
persons in other parts of the country, especially in the Rift Valley
areas of Eldoret, Timboroa, Nakuru, Burnt Forest and Limuru, and
the cities of Kisumu and Mombasa, which were also severely affected
by the violence.
Jane Onyango, executive director of the Federation
of Women Lawyers in Kenya, cautioned that gender issues must not
be forgotten when seeking solutions to Kenya's current crisis.
"In situations such as this, the legal process
is hard as it is often difficult for most of the women to identify
their abusers," she said. "There is a need for greater
collaboration among institutions dealing with women's issues,"
she added.
Onyango said the federation planned to visit the
violence hotspots to assist in the process of conflict resolution
and in counselling internally displaced people.
According to Ward, despite the current difficulties,
Kenya has addressed the issue of sexual violence and has mechanisms
in place that make it better able than many of its neighbours to
handle the current situation.
"Nevertheless, there will be a need to create
a multi-sectoral response to ensure that beyond addressing the health
needs of survivors of sexual violence, security issues are dealt
with, the legal process is streamlined and the police have the capacity
to handle the cases in a safe and ethical manner," she said.
From:
http://www.irinnews.org/report.aspx?ReportID=76247
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