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Rape Epidemic Raises Trauma
of Congo War
By Jeffrey Gettelman
October 7, 2007 - (New York Times) Denis Mukwege,
a Congolese gynecologist, cannot bear to listen to the stories his
patients tell him anymore.
Every day, 10 new women and girls who have been
raped show up at his hospital. Many have been so sadistically attacked
from the inside out, butchered by bayonets and assaulted with chunks
of wood, that their reproductive and digestive systems are beyond
repair.
“We don’t know why these rapes are
happening, but one thing is clear,” said Dr. Mukwege, who
works in South Kivu Province, the epicenter of Congo’s rape
epidemic. “They are done to destroy women.”
Eastern Congo is going through another one of its
convulsions of violence, and this time it seems that women are being
systematically attacked on a scale never before seen here. According
to the United Nations, 27,000 sexual assaults were reported in 2006
in South Kivu Province alone, and that may be just a fraction of
the total number across the country.
“The sexual violence in Congo is the worst
in the world,” said John Holmes, the United Nations under
secretary general for humanitarian affairs. “The sheer numbers,
the wholesale brutality, the culture of impunity — it’s
appalling.”
The days of chaos in Congo were supposed to be
over. Last year, this country of 66 million people held a historic
election that cost $500 million and was intended to end Congo’s
various wars and rebellions and its tradition of epically bad government.
But the elections have not unified the country
or significantly strengthened the Congolese government’s hand
to deal with renegade forces, many of them from outside the country.
The justice system and the military still barely function, and United
Nations officials say Congolese government troops are among the
worst offenders when it comes to rape. Large swaths of the country,
especially in the east, remain authority-free zones where civilians
are at the mercy of heavily armed groups who have made warfare a
livelihood and survive by raiding villages and abducting women for
ransom.
According to victims, one of the newest groups
to emerge is called the Rastas, a mysterious gang of dreadlocked
fugitives who live deep in the forest, wear shiny tracksuits and
Los Angeles Lakers jerseys and are notorious for burning babies,
kidnapping women and literally chopping up anybody who gets in their
way.
United Nations officials said the so-called Rastas
were once part of the Hutu militias who fled Rwanda after committing
genocide there in 1994, but now it seems they have split off on
their own and specialize in freelance cruelty.
Honorata Barinjibanwa, an 18-year-old woman with
high cheekbones and downcast eyes, said she was kidnapped from a
village that the Rastas raided in April and kept as a sex slave
until August. Most of that time she was tied to a tree, and she
still has rope marks ringing her delicate neck. The men would untie
her for a few hours each day to gang-rape her, she said.
“I’m weak, I’m angry, and I don’t
know how to restart my life,” she said from Panzi Hospital
in Bukavu, where she was taken after her captors freed her.
She is also pregnant.
While rape has always been a weapon of war, researchers
say they fear that Congo’s problem has metastasized into a
wider social phenomenon.
“It’s gone beyond the conflict,”
said Alexandra Bilak, who has studied various armed groups around
Bukavu, on the shores of Lake Kivu. She said that the number of
women abused and even killed by their husbands seemed to be going
up and that brutality toward women had become “almost normal.”
Malteser International, a European aid organization
that runs health clinics in eastern Congo, estimates that it will
treat 8,000 sexual violence cases this year, compared with 6,338
last year. The organization said that in one town, Shabunda, 70
percent of the women reported being sexually brutalized.
At Panzi Hospital, where Dr. Mukwege performs as
many as six rape-related surgeries a day, bed after bed is filled
with women lying on their backs, staring at the ceiling, with colostomy
bags hanging next to them because of all the internal damage.
“I still have pain and feel chills,”
said Kasindi Wabulasa, a patient who was raped in February by five
men. The men held an AK-47 rifle to her husband’s chest and
made him watch, telling him that if he closed his eyes, they would
shoot him. When they were finished, Ms. Wabulasa said, they shot
him anyway.
In almost all the reported cases, the culprits
are described as young men with guns, and in the deceptively beautiful
hills here, there is no shortage of them: poorly paid and often
mutinous government soldiers; homegrown militias called the Mai-Mai
who slick themselves with oil before marching into battle; members
of paramilitary groups originally from Uganda and Rwanda who have
destabilized this area over the past 10 years in a quest for gold
and all the other riches that can be extracted from Congo’s
exploited soil.
The attacks go on despite the presence of the largest
United Nations peacekeeping force in the world, with more than 17,000
troops.
Few seem to be spared. Dr. Mukwege said his oldest
patient was 75, his youngest 3.
“Some of these girls whose insides have been
destroyed are so young that they don’t understand what happened
to them,” Dr. Mukwege said. “They ask me if they will
ever be able to have children, and it’s hard to look into
their eyes.”
No one — doctors, aid workers, Congolese
and Western researchers — can explain exactly why this is
happening.
“That is the question,” said André
Bourque, a Canadian consultant who works with aid groups in eastern
Congo. “Sexual violence in Congo reaches a level never reached
anywhere else. It is even worse than in Rwanda during the genocide.”
Impunity may be a contributing factor, Mr. Bourque
added, saying that very few of the culprits are punished.
Many Congolese aid workers denied that the problem
was cultural and insisted that the widespread rapes were not the
product of something ingrained in the way men treated women in Congolese
society. “If that were the case, this would have showed up
long ago,” said Wilhelmine Ntakebuka, who coordinates a sexual
violence program in Bukavu.
Instead, she said, the epidemic of rapes seems
to have started in the mid-1990s. That coincides with the waves
of Hutu militiamen who escaped into Congo’s forests after
exterminating 800,000 Tutsis and moderate Hutus during Rwanda’s
genocide 13 years ago.
Mr. Holmes said that while government troops might
have raped thousands of women, the most vicious attacks had been
carried out by Hutu militias.
“These are people who were involved with
the genocide and have been psychologically destroyed by it,”
he said.
Mr. Bourque called this phenomenon “reversed
values” and said it could develop in heavily traumatized areas
that had been steeped in conflict for many years, like eastern Congo.
This place, one of the greenest, hilliest and most
scenic slices of central Africa, continues to reverberate from the
aftershocks of the genocide next door. Take the recent fighting
near Bukavu between the Congolese Army and Laurent Nkunda, a dissident
general who commands a formidable rebel force. Mr. Nkunda is a Congolese
Tutsi who has accused the Congolese Army of supporting Hutu militias,
which the army denies. Mr. Nkunda says his rebel force is simply
protecting Tutsi civilians from being victimized again.
But his men may be no better.
Willermine Mulihano said she was raped twice —
first by Hutu militiamen two years ago and then by Nkunda soldiers
in July. Two soldiers held her legs apart, while three others took
turns violating her.
“When I think about what happened,” she said, “I
feel anxious and brokenhearted.”
She is also lonely. Her husband divorced her after
the first rape, saying she was diseased.
In some cases, the attacks are on civilians already
caught in the cross-fire between warring groups. In one village
near Bukavu where 27 women were raped and 18 civilians killed in
May, the attackers left behind a note in broken Swahili telling
the villagers that the violence would go on as long as government
troops were in the area.
The United Nations peacekeepers here seem to be
stepping up efforts to protect women.
Recently, they initiated what they call “night
flashes,” in which three truckloads of peacekeepers drive
into the bush and keep their headlights on all night as a signal
to both civilians and armed groups that the peacekeepers are there.
Sometimes, when morning comes, 3,000 villagers are curled up on
the ground around them.
But the problem seems bigger than the resources
currently devoted to it.
Panzi Hospital has 350 beds, and though a new ward
is being built specifically for rape victims, the hospital sends
women back to their villages before they have fully recovered because
it needs space for the never-ending stream of new arrivals.
Dr. Mukwege, 52, said he remembered the days when
Bukavu was known for its stunning lake views and nearby national
parks, like Kahuzi-Biega.
“There used to be a lot of gorillas in there,”
he said. “But now they’ve been replaced by much more
savage beasts.”
From:http://www.nytimes.com/2007/10/07/world/africa/07congo.html?ref=multimedia
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