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KENYA: Rape on the rise in post-election
violence
January 2, 2008 - (IRIN) Amid the violence that
engulfed several residential areas of the Kenyan capital following
the declaration of controversial results of the presidential elections,
women in particular have been targetted, with at least one hospital
reporting a rise in the number of rape victims seeking treatment.
The Nairobi Women's Hospital said it had on 31
December received 19 rape cases, almost double the daily average.
Violence erupted mostly in the slums of Nairobi
and other areas soon after the Electoral Commission of Kenya announced
that incumbent President Mwai Kibaki had won the poll, beating his
opposition rival challenger Raila Odinga, who immediately rejected
the result citing alleged rigging of the poll in Kibaki's favour.
"It looked like it was mainly systematic gang
rapes," said Sam Thenya, the chief executive officer of the
hospital.
"This is just the tip of the iceberg,"
he said, adding that those who made it to the hospital had spoken
of other rape survivors who could not seek treatment because the
security situation prevented them from venturing out of the informal
settlements or they lacked transport.
The rape victims in Nairobi came mainly from the
slums of Kibera, Korogocho, Mathare and Dandora, according to Thenya.
Violence has pitted mainly Odinga's supporters against communities
perceived to have voted for Kibaki, with cases of reprisal attacks
also being reported.
Sexual violence has also been reported against
men, with the Kenyatta National Hospital in Nairobi on 2 January
saying several men had been admitted after they were assaulted during
the violence.
"There are several men admitted in various
wards after they were subjected to forced circumcision," a
source at the hospital said.
Odinga's core supporters come from the Luo ethnic
group that does not practise circumcision, while Kibaki draws most
of his following from the Kikuyu group, one of several tribes in
which male circumcision is an essential rite of passage from adolescence
to manhood.
From:http://www.irinnews.org/PrintReport.aspx?ReportId=76068
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