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Women decry impunity for
rape in Darfur
By Opheera McDoom
November 17, 2005 - (Reuters) A culture of impunity for rape in
Sudan's Darfur region means women like Mariam, assaulted and left
for dead, say they don't even bother to report the attacks to police,
aid workers and officials said.
Mariam, who was too afraid to give her full name because she was
worried about reprisals for discussing the taboo subject, says women
are most at risk when they leave the refugee camps that house around
2 million mostly women and children.
She arrived at the al-Bileel camp near the state capital Nyala after
fleeing her home in South Darfur state six months ago. She says
she watched as her 12-year-old cousin was raped, and then was subjected
to the same assault.
"I was out looking for firewood not far from here when this
man dressed in green khaki grabbed me and started beating me with
his gun," she said. Mariam was then raped and beaten for an
hour. She lost the sight in her right eye for more than a month.
"The police don't investigate anything so we don't even bother
to report it anymore," she said.
Unraveling her long green and yellow covering, a tiny baby emerged
from the folds of the fabric. "This is my youngest -- I have
six," she said, after relating the story told by so many Darfur
women struggling to keep their families alive on scant provisions
while also trying to fend off the violence aid workers say is systematic.
Canada's special envoy for peace in Sudan, Mobina Jaffer, said the
government needed to find and prosecute those who have sexually
assaulted hundreds of women in Darfur to stop the crime, otherwise
it would continue unchecked.
All sides of the conflict have committed the crime, she said --
the main rebel group, the Sudan Liberation Army (SLA), and the Arab
militias, known locally as Janjaweed.
"One woman said first the Janjaweed came and raped her village.
Then the SLA came and raped," she said. "Rape is a weapon
of war here."
"There is absolute impunity," she added.
The government in Khartoum had routinely denied or dismissed reports
of rape since the rebel uprising began in February 2003 and punished
groups reporting the attacks.
The Medecins Sans Frontieres (MSF) aid agency felt the full brunt
of the government's censure after it published a report earlier
this year detailing hundreds of attacks.
Authorities arrested two senior MSF officials for spying and publishing
false information, although the charges were eventually dropped
weeks later.
Since then Jaffer, on a visit to Darfur this week, said there were
some positive steps on the part of the government in recognizing
that rape occurs.
"We are not hearing now as before 'Good Muslim boys don't rape',"
she said.
But aid agencies heard the government's message and many are still
too afraid to let outsiders enter their trauma centers for women
or release figures for how many rape victims they treat.
"I'm worried that this has caused a silencing ... a silencing
of the voices of the women," Jaffer said.
"The government punished the messenger rather than dealing
with the message."
Non-Arab rebels took up arms in early 2003 saying the government
monopolized power and wealth. The United Nations says Khartoum responded
by arming militia who are accused of a widespread campaign of rape,
looting and killing.
The United States called the violence genocide, a charge Khartoum
denies. But the International Criminal Court is investigating suspected
war crimes in the remote region.
From: http://today.reuters.com/news/newsArticleSearch.aspx?storyID=222107+17-Nov-2005+RTRS&srch=women
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