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Hundreds of thousands raped
in Congo wars
By: Chris McGreal
November 14, 2006 – (The Guardian) Hundreds
of thousands of women and girls have been raped over the past decade
by soldiers, rebels and ethnic militias in the Democratic Republic
of Congo. The scale of the assaults has become increasingly evident
over recent months as growing numbers of women have emerged for
treatment with the reduction in fighting ahead of presidential elections,
and because medical workers have been able to reach areas in the
east of the country long cut off by conflict.
The survivors have given accounts of villages subjected
to repeated assaults in which many women and girls were serially
raped and men killed. Although there are no comprehensive statistics,
in one province alone, South Kivu, about 42,000 women were treated
in health clinics for serious sexual assaults last year, according
to statistics collected by the human rights group, Global Rights.
While rape has been a product of many conflicts,
its scale and systematic nature in eastern Congo has led some human
rights groups to describe it as a "weapon of war" used
to punish communities for their political loyalties or as a form
of ethnic cleansing. On occasions men and boys have also been raped.
Doctors and women's groups working with the victims
say the attacks are notable not only for their scale but also their
brutality. Among those receiving treatment in the relative safety
of the town of Goma in eastern Congo is a woman from Kindu who was
repeatedly raped in May 2005 but was only able to reach a hospital
for treatment earlier this year. The 54-year-old woman, bent double
over a stick after surgery to save her womb, said her village first
came under attack from a group of Mai Mai, an ethnic militia recognisable
by a preference for wearing animal skins and amulets believed to
give magical powers.
"There were Mai Mai in the area. They came
in the morning and raped me, two of them. That didn't disturb me
so much after what happened later," she said. "In the
afternoon five men came into the house. They told my husband to
put three kinds of money on the table: dollars, shillings, francs.
But we didn't have any of that kind of money. We are poor. We don't
even know what dollars look like. So they shot him. My children
were screaming and so they shot them. After that they raped me,
all of them." As she lay bleeding the attackers thrust the
barrels of their guns into her vagina.
The woman identified the second group of armed
men as members of the interahamwe, the extremist Hutu militia that
fled into Congo 12 years ago after leading the genocide of Tutsis
in Rwanda. The interahamwe used rape as a tool of genocide, telling
women that they would bear Hutu children and that would be the end
of the Tutsis. Thousands still hide out in the forests of eastern
Congo.
The Doctors On Call Service (DOCS) hospital in
Goma has seen close to 4,000 women for rape over the past four years.
One in four required major surgery. More than a third are under
18. "They really come with very bad wounds," said Justin
Paluku, a doctor. "For example some have their vaginas pulled
out. Most of them have been raped by four, five or six or even 10
men. A village will be attacked and all the women are raped. They
kill the men and rape the women."
Immaculee Birhaheka, head of a women's rights group
in Goma, Paif, said those women who make it to hospital are just
a fraction of those attacked. "It's impossible to know how
many women have been raped in the war but it is hundreds of thousands,"
she said.
Some human rights groups are calling for the leaders
of groups responsible for the tide of rape to be brought before
the International Criminal Court in the Hague. One militia leader,
Thomas Lubanga, founder of the Union of Congolese Patriots, went
on trial before the the ICC last week for the forced recruitment
of child soldiers, although his troops were also involved in the
systematic rape of civilians.
Mrs Birhaheka says the Congolese authorities must
act where the international court does not. Her women's rights group
was at the forefront of a campaign that persuaded the DRC parliament
to pass a new tougher law on rape earlier this year. "There
have already been 10 prosecutions in Goma under the new law, some
were soldiers and some civilians," she said. "Before it
was the women who were regarded as the criminals and condemned.
That's changing. Now at least there is a recognition that rape is
a crime."
Case study
Among the thousands of women attacked was a 23-year-old
from Walikali who travelled more than 90 miles (150km) to hospital
in Goma, where she had surgery after being assaulted by members
of the Rwandan Hutu militia, the interahamwe. "Where I lived
they were in the forest ... we had to go there to find food. There
were four of us and we were stopped by seven interahamwe,"
she said. Two of us tried to run away. One was shot dead. The other
got a bullet in the leg. They still raped her. I fainted because
there were seven of them. "I really got damaged. I couldn't
hold in my urine. I heard those people came back and killed my father."
From : http://www.guardian.co.uk/congo/story/0,,1947147,00.html
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