|
By Bahati Ntama Jacques
Published Feb 25, 2008
In wartime, the crime of
rape is not a new phenomenon; but the situation in the eastern Democratic Republic of the Congo
has no comparison. Many reports have
been written calling with urgency for national and international action to end
the rape pandemic in eastern Congo,
but the fact is that the situation continues to worsen. Jeffery Gettleman in his article Rape
Epidemic Raises Trauma of Congo War in New York Times October 7, 2007
reports that “Every day, 10 new women and girls who have been raped show up at
his hospital (refereeing to Panzi hospital in Bukavu). Many have been sadistically attacked from the
inside out, butchered by bayonets and assaulted with chunks of woods, that
their reproductive and genital systems are beyond repair.” Pretending to listen is not listening at
all. How much evidence does the world
need for immediate, imperative and unconditional action?
The victims are
many
Since the war began in
1996, no one knows the exact number of rape cases in the DRC. Often, they are
underreported either for lack of accurate reporting or for embarrassment of the
victims who do not wish to have their story known. Because of the worsening situation in eastern
DRC, we are now hearing the stories of some survivors who have come forward,
but we do not know the stories of those who were killed after being raped,
those who are silent because they have no one to turn to, those who are afraid
of rejection or retaliation by their victimizers, those who are silenced for
reasons that they only know, or those who are still being held hostage. In the DRC, the United Nations reported
27,000 cases of rape in 2006 and UNICEF reported 12,867 between May 2006-May
2007. Many of the victims test positive
for sexually transmitted diseases, among them HIV/AIDS.
Who are the offenders?
The offenders are the
Congolese army, internal militia groups (which, as of today are about 47 in the
north and south Kivu provinces) and foreign rebel groups operating on Congolese
territory. For the residents of Rugari,
Rumangabo Ntamugenga, and the surrounding areas it is not the first time women
have had to face the Congolese army on rape issues. In 1985, the former president Mobutu
Sesse-Seko sent many soldiers to the Rumangabo military base who had just came
from the war in Chad. Women were not safe anywhere until the men
and women, young and old, rose as one in different communities and took justice
into their hands to resist an army that had become a gang of bandits. While this solution tends to perpetuate the
cycle of violence, it was all the community could do at the time to stop the
offenders.
Among the foreign rebel
groups, lets take the example of the Hutu of the Democratic Liberation Forces
of Rwanda (FDLR). They kidnap women not only for their sexual desires, but also
because they want to have children who will continue the long war against the
Tutsi regime of Rwanda
– to whom they lost military and political power in 1994. Children are often used as spies or sent to
markets in addition to teaching them the methods of war. This is the reason why, even if a woman with
their child escapes, the Rwandan Hutu rebels want at least the child back. Consequently, the woman and the child have to live in hiding which sometimes
results in retaliation against the families or the village where the woman was
kidnapped.
A social challenge.
Reports of rape in
eastern Congo
have raised questions as to why some victims are abandoned by their families,
isolated in the village, or neglected after they are raped. In a society where a child out of wedlock is
a disgrace, it is difficult to face the reality of women bearing children of
their enemies. What has not been
mentioned in reports is that the whole society is an indirect victim of rape
and needs also to recover, heal and most importantly find ways to address this
new challenge. The presence of a child
of the enemy is a constant reminder to the women of the long hours, days, weeks
or months of being gang raped and it is a reminder to the whole society of the
many people their enemies killed, the things they looted and the continuous
struggle to defeat them. The Congolese
people have tried to protect their mothers, wives, sons and daughters, but
those who rape them have circumvented that protection. Many have been martyrs,
believing that no one should rape their loved ones. We rarely take ‘no’ as an answer in fighting
for the things we believe in, but when it happens, we are hurt, enraged and
ready to fight back. But at the local,
provincial and national government levels, the issue of rape has not been
effectively addressed. There is neither
a plan for healthcare nor a justice system to prosecute, protect, and pave the
way for social reconciliation.
Rape no more
Rape is never acceptable,
but in times of war it is a particularly vicious act, used as a weapon by the
perpetrators. We learn about women who
delivered sex services to Japanese soldiers in World War II, wartime rape in Berlin in 1945, in Yugoslavia
in 1992-1993, in Bosnia-Herzegovina in 1994, in the Balkans in 1993, in Rwanda in 1994, in Sudan/Darfur and Congo to this
day, and the list continues. We must
stand up and say: rape no more, at any time. AFJN believes it is time to come
together to take action for an immediate solution. Please visit the AFJN website and sign our
petition to the US
government to do more for the peace process in the D.R. Congo. Peace will not only mitigate the instances of
rape in Congo,
but will also allow the recovery and healing process from all war trauma to
begin.
Topic Related Links
|