Haunted by Congo rape dilemma
This article explains the horror of insurgent warfare, lawless societies and the lack of a working government and legal system to protect the populace. When you read it, ask yourself what happens if the US continues to allow uncontrolled immigration and threatens your ability to protect yourself. If you think there is much of a difference in the mentality of a 14 year old gang banger in the US and a child soldier in Africa you are wrong.
If we continue down our current path of allowing some groups to govern themselves, force their agenda on the majority and ignore violence in the name of tolerance then we deserve our fate. Lawless enclaves result from the lack of law enforcement not because of it.
The US has all the requirements for warfare to break out. A population with growing grievances, anger and distrust for those in government. A victim mindset, I know of no one that feels those in power are working to protect their rights and interests. A feeling that others are awarded special protected status. No trust that things will improve; many American’s feel things will only get worse. That sense of helplessness and diminished status will eventually lead to violence.
By Anne Mawathe, 15 May 10, BBC News, Goma
”The rebel leader asked me two things: ‘Do you want us to be your husband? Or do you want us to rape you?’”
Congolese mother-of-eight Clementine speaks in a quiet and hesitant voice:
“I chose to be raped.”
She explains: “I told myself, if I tell them that I want to be their wife, they will kill my husband. I didn’t want my children growing up saying the one that made our father die is our mother.”
-They would have also raised her children to be slaves and soldiers.
But that sacrifice was not enough. Her husband left her for another woman.
“After they raped me, my husband hated me. He said I was dirty. I often ask myself:
‘Surely, I gave up my dignity for him, how come he can abandon me this way?’”
Margot Wallstrom, the UN’s special representative on sexual violence in conflict recently said the Democratic Republic of Congo was the “rape capital of the world”.
A host of different armed groups roam parts of eastern DR Congo and all are accused of horrific violence against women.
-Keep in mind many of these conflicts are the result of the march of islam.
‘Failures’
Clementine says she will not marry again: “He is the husband I chose when I took my vows in the church. If God wills, he will return.”
It seems to be a forlorn hope.
Jocelyn Kelly, a researcher with the Harvard Humanitarian Initive’s Gender Based Violence progamme, says the men that have survived these attacks on their families are extremely traumatised themselves:
“They say: ‘I can no longer look at my wife.’ And every time they see this woman, they see someone they were not able to protect. They feel like failures and the only way they can deal with it is to reject their wife and start over.”
-Part of the problem with these groups is they are pride-focused societies. Personal honor is more important to them than it is in western societies. We value the personal triumph over adversity where they go to great links to hide any sign of personal embarrassment.
This is part of the damage that has been caused by people like Emmanuel, a former child soldier who is now 22 years old.
He fought with the CNDP rebel group.
Emmanuel says that they raped to show their anger with the authorities for neglecting them.
“Soldiers or rebels usually rape because we stay in isolated places and we don’t get our pay – even if it can come, it doesn’t come on time.
“After living for a long time in the forest, you don’t see women and so if one woman shows up then all of us, we profit.”
Weapon of war
But Congolese women’s rights activist and vice-president of the Women’s International League for Peace and Freedom, Marie-Claire Faray argues that men like Emmanuel are taking advantage of the vulnerability of women.
“What is their cause? This is nothing to do with women,” she says.
“It doesn’t make sense. They are getting some form of pleasure out of it and it has nothing to do with fighting for a cause.”
Sexual violence is used as a weapon of war and with extraordinary brutality: Gang rape is commonplace; and objects such as gun butts are sometimes used.
At a centre in the main eastern Congolese town of Goma, where rape survivors are brought from various villages for medical attention, 57 women are singing and dancing to the beat of a drum.
Their ululations and agile dancing mask their fear.
Even though the worst has already happened.
Cold and emotionless
In one of the rooms, a heavy foul smell suffocates the air. At first impression, it gives the impression of a toilet that is not clean. It wasn’t.
The smell was coming from the women themselves.
Some of them are suffering from fistula whose manifestation is the uncontrollable passage of urine and in some cases, faeces.
One 15-year-old is drumming as hard as she can.
-Her story is painful to read but common in countries where women are considered property.
Her experiences exemplify this complex war raging against women. She was abducted by 10 rebels from the Interahamwe group accused of carrying out the genocide in neighbouring Rwanda. They kept her for about a year as a sex slave.
”They would rape me in turns. It got to a point where I did not feel pain.”
They fed her when they wished and gave her water from their gumboots to drink. She soon became pregnant. The rebels said she would be set free once she had given birth.
”One day they tied me to a tree and tried to pull the baby out. The blood… it just kept flowing.”
She says she can no longer feel pain and relates all this in a detached manner – cold and emotionless – and then ties a colourful wraparound around her waist and walks away.
Prison
A former government soldier who is serving 20 years in Goma Central Prison says he attacked the first woman he came across after sneaking away from his post:
”I asked her to help me. I had this urge to have sex. She didn’t want to have sex with me. But I forced her. I felt that if I didn’t have sex then I would get sick.
“She left without crying but as she was leaving she said she would denounce me. I regret it now because I am in prison.”
He is among the few to have been arrested.
Ms Kelly says that many soldiers view women as men’s helpers.
“There is this attitude that it is a man’s right to have sex and there’s no way that a man cannot have sex.”
-It does not help that that seventh century mindset is supported in the koran. Not all of Africa’s conflicts link to islam but many are a direct result of muslim groups attempting to gain control over others.
Ms Faray despairs: “If they can’t control themselves, then they are at the level of an animal. It is really just an excuse to legitimise the violence and they are living in a situation of impunity. It is an excuse to live a life of lawlessness.”
Dr Lucy Kasereka of the Heal Africa Hospital says justice is hard to come by.
”Even when these suspects are arrested, there is no proper prison or even legal representation. For us Christians, the Ten Commandments are our judge.”
‘They destroyed my life’
Provincial Minister for Justice and Human Rights Francois Rucogoza thinks that if DR Congo can rid itself of all the armed groups, rape will be a thing of the past.
But women like Yvone, 37, will never escape the past.
Her husband was made to watch while she was raped, repeatedly. Today, her husband wants nothing to do with her.
Yvone explains: “I am living with my husband in the same house but we are separated. He spends nights on his bed and I spend nights on my bed with the children.
“We cannot do the act of love. When I need him, I tell him, but he says ‘No. Never.’ ‘He tells me to go back to my husbands, the Interahamwe, every time we argue.”
She says she begs her husband to understand her situation. He refuses to.
Only other women understand her.
Clementine speaks for them all when she says:
“I cannot forgive these rapists because they destroyed my life. Sometimes I feel like I don’t have a desire to live on this Earth.”
-See any sign that this type of dehumanization and uncontrolled violence is coming to the US? I do and I think it is already here.
15 May, 2010 at 6:51 am
This is a tough one for me to grasp. The compassionate side of me wants us to move in and straighten out the problems. But, the logical side tells me that they are perhaps broken beyond repair.
How can we fix a civilization that does not want to be fixed?
15 May, 2010 at 7:35 am
Take notice most of the places on this earth where these horrific events occur the populace are forbidden to posses firearms for personal protection,(Dufar to name one)leaving them at the will of their failed governments or lawless rebels and brigands. We in the US must insist that our 2nd Amendment rights are never taken away from us. Which is an aim and goal of the Obama administration. They deny such accusations,however most of our ‘Dear Leader’s’ appointees and judicial nominees are solidly anti-gun. There is no Constitutional right to police protection, is is at the Whim of the Federal,State,County,or Local Governing authority. The right of free citizens to defend themselves is mentioned many times throughout history from ancient Greece to the 2nd Amendment, however most governments have taken it away leaving their citizens subject to harm.
15 May, 2010 at 8:44 am
“Democratic Republic of Congo”
Dare I say, along with the islamic element, the “Democratic” part may play a role?
15 May, 2010 at 11:06 am
Prediction= As whites leave the lost continent of Africa the whole place drifts back into a primitive stone age culture. Just a prediction, based on what I have seen going on. for a long time blacks have blamed whites for all their woes when in reality it is them as a people who are completely to blame. But I’m prolly a racist for noticing right? The black that crawls out from under this is truly in a minority of extremists ( and they have their heads out their arses too) battling against all odds. If you can be considered one of these people you have a lot to be proud of.