|
WOMEN SURVIVORS OF THE RWANDAN
GENOCIDE FACE GRIM REALITIES
April 6, 2004 (IPS) Mamerthe Karuhimbi was
19 when the killers came to her home in the Rwandan town of Nyamata,
a decade ago. On 6 Apr. 1994, a plane carrying Rwandan President
Juvenal Habyarimana and his Burundian counterpart, Cyprien Ntaryamira,
was shot down over the Rwandan capital - Kigali. Shortly after that,
a wave of violence spilled over the tiny central African country
as officials and hardline members of the Hutu majority embarked
on a killing spree that targeted minority Tutsis and moderate Hutus.
Karuhumbi escaped numerous attacks, fleeing a church where thousands
were massacred, and running from a maternity hospital where the
militia slaughtered newborn babies. She finally took shelter in
the bush, but not before she was raped and saw her friend hacked
to death with a machete.
Of the 12 people in her immediate family, only Karuhimbi and her
mother survived. But ten years later she has little hope for her
future. "I have no life because I don't have a family or children,"
Karuhumbi told IPS.
Her words are echoed by Elizabeth Onyango, Programme Coordinator
for African Rights - a non-governmental group based in Kigali and
London. "A lot of them (women survivors) see themselves as
dead already," she said. "(They) are actually quite confused
about whether they're happy to be alive or not. As survivors, there
is always the question of Why am I alive?'"
As Rwanda commemorates the tenth anniversary of the genocide this
week with the opening of a memorial centre in Kigali on Apr. 7,
many women survivors like Karuhimbi are still dealing with the poisonous
legacies of the 100-day massacre.
Estimates vary about how many were killed in the genocide, but the
Rwandan Minister of Sports, Youth and Culture, Robert Bayigamba,
said last week that 937,000 bodies had been recovered, and that
more were expected to be found. Other sources put the death toll
at 800,000.
One of the most pressing problems that women survivors face is poverty
- as many lost everything they had in the course of the genocide.
"They don't have houses, they are poor, they are very vulnerable
(and) they can't find money for their children," said Aurea
Kayiganwa of Avega- Agahozo, an association of genocide widows.
A number of women who had their limbs amputated during the killings
also face the added burden of disability.
What has made matters worse, adds Kayiganwa, is that many of those
responsible for the killings - the so-called "genocidaires"
- are now relatively well off. "When you lose your husband
and you have no children to take care of, it's not easy to feel
okay in the community. The big problem is that the woman survivor
is poor, but the former militia member is okay. He has his family
or children. He is rich, he has a house," she observes.
According to the Canadian International Development Agency, Rwanda
is one of the world's most impoverished countries, with a per capita
gross national income of just 230 dollars. The majority of its population
of just over eight million lives on less than a dollar a day, making
women survivors the poorest of the poor.
The sexual abuse that occurred during the genocide has also left
scars. An umbrella organisation for women's groups in Rwanda, Pro-Femmes
Twese Hamwe, estimates that 90 percent of Tutsi women were raped,
although most have never reported it.
"Rape was a tool of genocide," says Maria Immaculee Ingabire,
Media Officer for Pro-Femmes. "There were many rapes, systematically."
In addition, many more women - both Hutu and Tutsi - were raped
in the refugee camps that sprang up in Congo-Kinshasa, Tanzania,
and Uganda, as millions fled the advance of the rebel Rwandan Patriotic
Front (RPF) during the genocide.
The RPF, consisting mostly of Tutsis, had started attacking Rwanda's
Hutu-dominated government in 1990, although a peace accord was struck
in 1993. As news of the genocide spread, the RPF renewed its offensive,
ultimately taking control of Rwanda. Human rights groups say the
group was responsible for its own share of abuses as it pursued
Hutu militants, many of whom had banded together in the "interahamwe"
militias. (Interahamwe means "those who stand or attack together".)
In conservative Rwanda, activists say, it is extremely difficult
for women to speak about rape.
"If you are raped, Rwandan society can't understand that you
are a victim," Ingabire told IPS. Moreover, women who are raped
may never be able to get married because of the stigma attached
to them.
Many women were gang-raped and did not know their attackers, which
made it even harder for them to testify or report the crime. As
if that were not enough, several rape survivors have also begun
to test positive for HIV in recent years.
African Rights recently conducted a study of 201 women genocide
survivors in Rwanda and the Burundian capital, Bujumbura, the results
of which will be released later this month. All of the women had
been raped, and a large number were HIV-positive. Others were also
likely to have contracted the virus, but had never been tested,
says Onyango: many simply did not want to know their status.
"Most of them were ailing in one form or another, but you can't
tell what they have," she noted. "It's difficult to correlate.
Do you know if the HIV came about directly because of this rape?
You don't always know."
Not surprisingly, most HIV-positive survivors have little access
to anti-retroviral drugs (ARVs) to help them withstand AIDS-related
illnesses. Onyango says none of the women in the African Rights
study was on regular ARV treatment. Although the cost of the medication
has fallen to about 30 dollars per month in Rwanda, that is still
far above the means of most people living in the country.
Avega-Agahozo runs an HIV clinic for about 600 of
its members who are living with HIV, but they only have funds to
provide ARVs for 22 women. "Those who are HIV positive die
one by one," said Kayiganwa. "Every month we have some
women who die because we can't have ARVs for everyone, and they
are all over the country."
The consensus of most organisations that work with genocide survivors
in Rwanda is that is not enough international funding is available
to help those who lived through the genocide. Pro-Femmes is currently
pushing the International Criminal Tribunal for Rwanda in Arusha,
Tanzania, and the United Nations to provide free ARVs for women
survivors so that they can live long enough to give testimony about
their experiences. The genocide suspects on trial in Arusha are
already being given free ARVs, according to Ingabire.
Kayiganwa adds that although many donors were on hand in the immediate
aftermath of the 1994 killings, Avega-Agahozo has depended on three
main funders since 1999. As orphans reach their teenage years, and
children born of rape start asking about their fathers, the need
for aid programmes has increased. "What we want now, ten years
after, we want people to help the victims of genocide," said
Kayiganwa. "Genocide is an international crime, so people have
to help us and have solidarity because we are living in a sad situation."
But, despite these grim realities, some activists are cautiously
hopeful about the future.
A number of women who have become aware of their HIV status have
started to speak about their genocide experiences more openly. Ingabire
says Hutu and Tutsi women have also found common ground through
their experiences of rape.Women representatives now make up 48 percent
of the Rwandan parliament, the highest percentage of female legislators
in the world, and Ingabire believes women are finding their voice
in the country.
"Women know that in a conflict situation they are the first
victims," she told IPS. "So they have a responsibility
to fight violence."
From: http://www.ipsnews.net/africa/interna.asp?idnews=23198
|