IN WAR-RIDDLED CONGO,
MILITIAS RAPE WITH IMPUNITY
INTERNATIONAL
By Tiare
Rath - WeNews correspondent
BUKAVU, Democratic
Republic of the Congo (WOMENSENEWS)
--At just 13, Gisele Buhendwa
possesses a tough exterior
that reveals little.
She tells her
story in a matter-of-fact
manner: her deep, scratchy
voice never changing tone,
and her scrawny, boyish body
never showing a hint of emotion.
The only physical sign that
displacement, kidnapping and
rape affected her, like thousands
of other girls in war-tortured
East Congo, is that she refuses
to look anyone in the eye.
In July, Buhendwa
and her older sisters fled
to escape the fate of other
girls recently snatched by
militiamen raiding their village
in South Kivu. Knowing the
kidnapped girls would be raped
and most likely never heard
from again, Buhendwa's parents
told her to run to Bukavu,
the largest city in South
Kivu, where they believed
she would find safety living
with her sister high on the
mountain.
Two days after
her arrival, she was raped.
She got lost,
she said, staring out the
window, her neck constantly
craned away from those in
the small room without electricity.
She lost her way home while
fetching water, and was approached
by two men in uniform who
said they'd help get her back
home.
One instead
took her to his militia camp
and spent the night violating
her, telling her when he left
in the morning to have breakfast
ready when he returned or
she would be killed. Another
man wearing a uniform appeared
after her rapist departed,
advising her to escape while
she had the chance. For the
second time in 48 hours, she
ran.
"When I
remember it, I feel I might
go mad. I get a headache and
I feel very sick," Buhendwa
said. "When I see any
soldier, my heart starts pounding
and I run away."
By this war's
standards, Buhendwa was lucky.
It took her five hours, but
she made it to her sister's
house and received support
from her family, rather than
shame. She bled after the
rape, still has stomachaches
and cannot bear to go out
after dark. But she was not
held for months, beaten and
sexually assaulted every night
like many of the girls at
a center for women and children
in Bukavu where she spent
time last fall.
Rape Used
as Brutal Weapon in Five-Year
War
Rape is frequently
used as a weapon in war and
the five-year conflict in
the Congo has proved just
how brutal that weapon can
be. No reliable figures exist
as to how many women and girls
have been victims, but in
the South Kivu region bordering
Rwanda and Burundi, it is
difficult to find a family
not affected by sexual violence.
The most horrifying
stories include those of as
many as 3,000 women in Shabunda--an
area in central South Kivu--who
were raped between late 1999
and mid-2001, primarily by
tribal Mayi-Mayi fighters.
Some who were sexually violated
escaped to outlying towns
and cities and reported being
raped again by rival militias
along the way.
"All different
rebel groups fighting in the
area have made terror against
civilians their way of fighting
the war and sexual violence
is part of that," said
Juliane Kippenberg, co-author
of a 114-page Human Rights
Watch report, "The War
Within the War: sexual violence
against women and girls in
Eastern Congo," which
was released last year.
Soldiers or
militiamen are frequently
the perpetrators, but victims
often can only make educated
guesses as to which rebel
group or army their assaulters
belong. At least a dozen rebel
groups have sprung up since
the war began and six foreign
armies have fought in Congo.
Rwanda and Uganda
invaded eastern Congo in 1998
to protect their borders from
hostile militias, including
the Interhamwe, which participated
in carrying out the genocide
in Rwanda in 1994 before fleeing
to Congo. The Rwandan and
Uganda armies, along with
militaries from other African
countries allied with the
Congolese government, pulled
out most of their troops last
fall in line with a peace
agreement, but the area remains
more unstable than ever.
The war between
neighboring countries, anti-government
militias and nationalistic
rebel groups in nearly half
of the Congo--Africa's third-largest
nation--has devastated its
civilian population. A United
Nations report released in
October on the plundering
of the country's vast mineral
wealth--widely believed to
be a major cause of the conflict--estimated
that if the mortality rate
continued as it had since
1998, the war would have taken
3.5 million lives by late
2002.
Most have died
of malnutrition and disease.
International relief agencies,
accustomed to providing food,
medical supplies and other
basic-needs services, found
sexual violence so widespread
in the region that they established
crisis and follow-up medical
care for victims. Doctors
Without Borders has one of
the largest operations and
is still treating women from
the Shabunda attacks.
Local, International
Organizations Aid Victims
With the U.S.
war in Iraq, some non-governmental
organizations are concerned
that international attention
and money may be diverted
from humanitarian aid in the
Congo and elsewhere, said
Kris Torgeson, spokeswoman
for Doctors Without Borders
in New York.
"We're
needs-driven, not media-driven,"
she said. But, she added,
"Donor dollars often
follow media attention."
Local organizations
have emerged as well to support
women and girls, particularly
around the Bukavu area. Once
a playground for former dictator
Mobutu Seso Seko, who renamed
the nation Zaire during his
30-year reign, Bukavu is home
to lush mountains, a beautiful
lake and the most important
universities in the east that
make it a center for civil
society.
"Women
and children have suffered
the most in this conflict.
They're not protected,"
said Claudine Mwa Mulegwa,
secretary-general of Amaldefea,
a non-governmental organization
in Bukavu supporting mothers
and children.
Many of the
girls who learn to read, write
and sew at Amaldefea also
find common, tortured histories.
Like Buhendwa, 18-year-old
Alima Malehe now lives away
from home. Since August, she
frequently gets stomachaches
and her heart thunders whenever
she sees a soldier. That is
because one night, men in
uniform pounded on her front
door, demanding to see a girl
who fit Malehe's description.
Her family begged them to
take whatever they wanted
and leave, but they searched
the house until they found
Malehe hiding under bed.
Dragging her
out into the living room,
the soldiers tore her clothes
and raped her in front of
her parents. She does not
know how many assaulted her
because she, like other girls
and young women interviewed,
passed out after the third
began his rape. Malehe sought
refuge from her village in
Kabare, north of Bukavu, with
her sister in the Bukavu mountains.
Since September, she began
receiving a certain level
of comfort at Amaldefea.
The neighbors
in her village now whisper
about her, she said, and it
isn't with sympathy. She worries
she contracted HIV or another
sexually-transmitted disease
but has not received medical
care. Her potential to marry
and have children, Malehe
believes, is over.
"I've been
raped," she said, her
eyes fixated on the floor.
"My reputation is spoiled."
Many Families
Reject Raped Women
The widespread
rapes of women and girls are
"very well-known,"
said Karin Wachter, who works
with the International Rescue
Committee's sexual- and gender-based
violence project. "People
are talking about it, but
women and girls still aren't
let back into their families
sometimes and definitely not
by their husbands."
Malehe's family
does not reject her, she said,
but the few times she returned
home were uncomfortable. Her
concern about HIV is valid:
Human Rights Watch reports
that 60 percent of troops
and militiamen involved in
the Congo conflict are infected
with HIV/AIDS.
She does not
know to which militia the
men in uniform who sexually
assaulted her belong, and
she does not expect to receive
any kind of justice. With
the war, Eastern Congo is
dominated by violence, lawlessness
and poverty: elements that
allow fighters to act as they
please, according to Tony
Tate, who helped research
the Human Rights Watch report.
"They're
basically making sport of
the whole thing," Tate
said. "Probably a lot
of them feel like they're
never going to get caught.
They don't care."
After learning
of her sister's rape, Buhendwa's
older sister marched to the
notoriously dangerous military
camp where the 13-year-old
was held and demanded the
commander reprimand the soldier.
The commander, in turn, made
a veiled threat by reminding
her that the militiaman could
also identify Buhendwa--and
figure out where her family
resided.
The camp is
run by the Congolese Rally
for Democracy, a Rwandan-backed
militia controlling Bukavu
and parts of South and North
Kivu. The militia officially
stands for democracy, peace
and justice, but locals said
that in practice, the exact
opposite is true. One official
from the Congolese Rally for
Democracy reluctantly admitted
the militia, along with others
such as the rival Mayi-Mayi
and Interhamwe, sexually assaults
girls.
"We are
also participating in the
injustice," said Prosper
Mushobekwa Nyalukemba, president
of the South Kivu Province
Assembly.
Christianity
runs strong here. Many girls
said because of their religious
values, it is more important
that they forgive their rapists
rather than wait for justice.
"Even if
I get angry about it, I can't
change anything," Malehe
said. "What's done is
done. It was fate."
Tiare Rath
is a New York City-based freelance
reporter.
For more
information:
Human Rights
Watch-- - "The War Within
the War: Sexual Violence against
- Women and Girls in Eastern
Congo": - http://www.hrw.org/reports/2002/drc/
Medecins Sans
Frontieres (Doctors Without
Borders)-- - "MSF in
the Democratic Republic of
Congo": - http://www.msf.org/countries/index.cfm?indexid=22D106CD-BEC7-11D4-852200902789187E
International
Rescue Committee-- - "The
IRC in The Democratic Republic
Of Congo": - http://www.theirc.org/Bukavu/