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RAPE SURGES AMID ANARCHY IN LIBERIA
By Alexandra Zavis
August 9, 2003 (AP) Clutching her daughter's photograph to her
breast, Rebecca throws back her head and wails. Gunmen burst into her
home and raped the child on her 10th birthday, leaving her lying in a
pool of blood and vomit dead.
Every time fighting surges in Liberia, women are raped, aid workers say.
But this time, the scale is incalculable. Wild-eyed men are going door
to door, ransacking homes, beating and killing people, and raping any
women or girls they find.
Both sides in the battle are implicated the fighters of warlord
President Charles Taylor, as well as the rebels trying to overthrow him.
Women used to be most at risk fleeing through the bush, aid workers say.
Now they are not safe in their homes either.
"Those people are not human beings," sobs Rebecca, now sheltering
in a friend's yard. She, like other victims, doesn't want her surname
published for fear of reprisals. July 20 began with Rebecca, 42, waking
the sleeping child with a chorus of "Happy Birthday." She gathered
her son and a friend's 14-year-old girl with them for Sunday prayers.
Then government fighters pounded at the gate.
A young man smashed Rebecca's head with a hammer and tore off her clothes,
while her 10-year-old clung to her, crying "Mommy! Mommy!" When
the man realized Rebecca was menstruating, he kicked her.
Another fighter, who called himself Black Dog, ripped the child from her
mother and threw her to the floor.
"When he got through with her, I saw blood, I saw vomit, I saw
toilet," Rebecca says, moaning rhythmically. "He raped her to
death." As her daughter lay on the floor, another man grabbed the
14-year-old and raped her, too.
"He was holding me," whispers the child, sitting bolt upright,
knees pressed together and hands twisting in her lap. "I was fighting,
kicking him."
Rape has always gone hand in hand with war in Liberia, where Taylor's
first grab for power in 1989 ushered in nearly 14 years of strife.
"Every time there is an incursion going on, it is the same thing,"
says Miatta Roberts, a counselor with the Liberian-run Concerned Christian
Community the only group remaining here that works with rape survivors.
"When there is war going on, no woman is safe."
Figures are impossible to track, because most victims are either cut
off by fighting or feel too humiliated to seek help. But the few counselors
left after international aid groups pulled out foreign staff say they've
never seen so many cases.
"It's more rampant than ever before," said Mariama Brown, the
group's founding director. The attacks are usually linked to looting sprees
by drunk, drugged and disaffected fighters.Many feel abandoned since Taylor
bowed to mounting international pressure and pledged to hand over power,
so they have launched what they call "Operation Pay Yourself."
With no functioning court system at the moment, they act with impunity.
Some 1,500 women participate in the Christian group's trauma programs
at a teeming refugee camp in an athletics stadium. Of these, 626 have
been raped.
In better times, the group gave the women food, clothing, medical treatment
and skills training. Now they can do little more than provide a safe haven
and keep them busy. The women play games together in a bamboo and tarpaulin
enclosure and sing traditional songs to remind them of home.
Joining a circle of clapping, singing women, 20-year-old Alice breaks
into a rare smile.
Three years ago, she was gang-raped in front of her whole family as they
fled through the bush ahead of a rebel advance. Last month, pro-Taylor
militia fighters caught up with her on the outskirts of Monrovia, pulling
her from a group of refugees huddled in an abandoned home.
The repeated rapes have shattered her dreams of marriage and children.
"I feel shame before men," she says. "No one approaches
me now."
Violence against women is as widespread in rebel-held areas, aid workers
say.
While fleeing the insurgents' latest advance, Kula's family stumbled into
a rebel ambush. Her husband, mother, aunt and brother were killed on the
spot.
When she finally reached a refugee camp outside Monrovia, she thought
she was safe. But soon the rebels were back, moving from hut to hut in
search of women.
"They shared us among themselves," says Kula, who is 47 but
looks much older. "Everyone was crying."
Four days later it happened again. Rebels with stockings over their faces
burst into the house where she was sheltering and grabbed all the women.
Two fighters raped Kula this time, one of them so young he could barely
hold up his machine gun no older than 10, she guesses.
"I think the women who can say they haven't been raped are very few,"
she says sorrowfully. "It pains my heart."
As for Rebecca, the fighters stripped her house and even took the family
album. Rebecca has only one picture left of her daughter, taken when she
was 11 months old a solemn child with bright bows in her hair,
standing unsteadily with the help of a piece of furniture.
Falling to her knees, Rebecca sobs: "Just kill me. I want to die."
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