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WOMEN TALK OF RAPE BEFORE THE
SIERRA LEONE TRUTH COMMISSION
May 22, 2003 - (Coalition for Womens Human
Rights in Conflict Situations- News Release) The Coalition on Women's
Human Rights in Conflict Situations testified today before the Truth
and Reconciliation Commission (TRC) at special hearings on sexual
violence during Sierra Leone's decade-long war. The TRC is dedicating
two days to thematic hearings on sexual violence.
"Sexual violence has remained Sierra Leone's invisible war
crime. Thousands were raped during the decade-long war," said
Binaifer Nowrojee, a Kenyan lawyer who testified on behalf of the
Coalition. "The TRC is providing an important historic opportunity
to give voice to the silent suffering of these rape survivors."
During the decade-long conflict in Sierra Leone from 1991 to 2001,
thousands of women and girls were subjected to widespread and sexual
violence, including individual and gang rape, and rape with objects
such as weapons, firewood, umbrellas, and pestles. The victims of
rape were of all ages, ethnic groups, and socio-economic classes.
The sexual violence was perpetrated by both the rebels and the government,
but mostly by rebel forces.
According to Human Rights Watch, child combatants raped women who
were old enough to be their grandmothers, rebels raped pregnant
and breastfeeding mothers, and fathers were forced to watch their
daughters being raped. Women were made forced "wives"
of the combatants. Young women and girls whom the rebels thought
were virgins were particularly targeted for rape and forced "marriage."
Many women were raped so violently that they sometimes bled to death
or suffered tearing in the genital area. The crimes of sexual violence
were generally characterized by extraordinary brutality and frequently
preceded or followed by other egregious human rights abuses.
These hearings will allow the TRC to more fully examine and record
the crimes of sexual violence that were inflicted against Sierra
Leonean women during the conflict. Sexual violence has remained
Sierra Leone's invisible war crime. Until recently, little attention
has been paid either nationally or internationally to this human
rights abuse, although sexual violence was committed on a much larger
scale than the widely reported amputations for which Sierra Leone
became notorious. The underreporting is a reflection of the failure
of most observers, documenters, and the media to investigate and
report the attacks on women. The lack of publicity is also the result
of the subordinated status of women and girls in Sierra Leone that
further disadvantages them and downplays their suffering. The stigma
and internal shame that makes survivors unwilling to come forward
for fear of rejection by their family or communities is also another
reason for the silence.
The Coalition urged the TRC to ensure an enabling environment that
will provide rape victims with the comfort and privacy they need
to come forward to testify. It called on the TRC to ensure that
the experiences of women during the war are fully reflected in their
findings. In its consideration of rape and other sexual violence
crimes, the Coalition urged the TRC to frame its findings within
the context of the expanding international law and not to downplay
or trivialize women's experiences during the war. In concluding,
the Coalition urged the TRC to ensure that their recommendations
to the Sierra Leonean government and the international community
consider the specific needs of the women survivors.
For further information please contact:
Binaifer Nowrojee: 232-76-680-504 until May 23 and 1-617-493-2990
after May 23 -- email: nowrojee@fas.harvard.edu
From: http://www.ichrdd.ca/english/commdoc/prelease/TRCsierra.html
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