BANGUI, 19 Aug 2005 (IRIN)
- Nearly five years after Congolese rebels introduced rape as a
psychological weapon in the Central African Republic (CAR),
individual victims and the nation as a whole are still dealing
with the fallout.
Despite the anguish, victims or witnesses of rape in the capital,
Bangui, are willing to talk about their trauma. One such person
is secondary school teacher Bernadette Sayo, who was widowed in
2002 when rebels of the Mouvement de libération du Congo (MLC)
killed her husband while she watched, and then raped her.
The MLC, headed by Jean-Pierre Bemba, had been invited by
President Ange-Felix Patassé to shore up his government against
André Kolingba, who tried to unseat him in a bloody, abortive
coup on 28 May 2001. Bemba's fighters ran amok - looting, killing
men and raping women in Ouango in the eastern area of the
capital, where Kolingba and his Yakoma people were based.
The situation worsened in October 2002 when rebels headed by
Francois Bozize - then army chief of staff, now president -
successfully seized power.
Again Patassé received Bemba's support and the latter's men
claimed the "spoils" of war: again, they raped women
like Sayo and sodomised men in the northern sector of Bangui,
predominantly a Bozize stronghold. It was a barbaric episode that
Sayo has found hard to forget.
"Despite my unceasing efforts to talk about it and get some
[cathartic] release, I am still upset," she said.
Women and girls of all ages - some younger than six years, some
older than 60 - were not spared. Now, many married women face
divorce; others have contracted HIV-AIDS; some have had babies.
Sayo is the founder and chairwoman of OCODEFAD (L'Organisation
pour la Compassion et le Développement des Familles en
Détresse), which aims to take legal action against rapists and
their accomplices, create income-generating activities for the
victims, and advocate women's dignity. She says the NGO has
registered 800 victims of rape and 16 conflict-born babies, and
has been the only organisation caring for victims since
Kolingba's attempted coup.
OCODEFAD has also documented 140 men, such as Jacques Sanzé, who
were sodomised or forced into sexual intercourse with female MLC
rebels: acts intended to humiliate, debase and stigmatise them.
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ENDLESS HUMILIATION
Most rape victims say they are still shamed and rejected by their
communities, and many try to avoid humiliation by staying
indoors; many girls have dropped out of school because
insensitive classmates laugh, rather than sympathise, with their
ordeal; older victims feel ostracised by their neighbours,
husbands and relatives.
Fana Moussa, 26, says she can no longer marry because men avoid
her and she is viewed as the "wife of the
Banyamulenge", as the MLC men are known in CAR.
"I feel rejected by those around me," she said.
"In fact, I am ashamed when people see me."
As a Muslim, Moussa says her rejection is near total - her
husband no longer wants her, and other Muslims say she has
violated the Koran, even though she is a victim of rape.
"This woman, like all others in this neighbourhood,
committed adultery, which is forbidden by the Koran," said
Hassan, a businessman and Moussa's neighbour, who did not reveal
his surname. "She is impure and there is no question of
marrying her or even having sexual relations with her - it would
be sacrilege for a good Muslim to live in marriage with
her."
Such sentiments have forced Moussa and other Muslim women in a
similar situation into reclusive lives in the northern end of
Bangui.
The ordeal of rape victims is being perpetuated: ostracism has
forced households to break up; family support structures have
fallen apart - rape victims often have little or no money and
find it difficult just to get food; some children have dropped
out of school because parents can no longer pay the fees.
Their needs are great. "We want free psychological, medical
and social care for the victims first; free schooling for the
children, and state protection because we are very vulnerable
people and we have no security," Sayo said.
However, Georges M'Baga, director of cabinet at the Ministry of
Social Affairs, said, "The Ministry of Social Affairs and of
the Family is fighting to provide social, financial, medical and
sociological care to the rape victims."
LITTLE HELP AVAILABLE
According to Sayo there has been no recent tangible aid to rape
victims from a government that owes its civil servants 40 months
in salary arrears. The government has said it is trying to have
the International Court of Justice in The Hague review the case
of rape victims.
With the exception of help from the UN Development Programme in
2003, no international organisation had so far paid attention to
the plight of the victims, Sayo commented. As a result,
HIV-positive rape victims are dying because they cannot afford
antiretroviral medication.
The public had thought rape would end with Bozize's seizure of
power in mid-March 2003, but the practice continues - this time
by Central Africans. Victims have often blamed soldiers, saying
they rape with few or no legal consequences, and this is backed
up by police reports showing that regular army soldiers are to
blame, said a high ranking police officer who spoke on condition
of anonymity.
Thus, rapists appear to be undaunted by President Bozize's
request that the judiciary deal severely with the culprits. In
2004, a group of soldiers found guilty of rape were discharged
from the army and imprisoned, but for the most part perpetrators
either escape police custody or are freed by fellow soldiers and
other security agents.
LEGAL ACTION
Despite her lack of trust in the military, Elisabeth Mayongo, 50,
still believes in the judicial system.
"We only want justice, and only this will console us of this
humiliation inflicted on us by the killers [Patassé and
Bemba]," she said.
OCODEFAD has filed a complaint against Patasse and Bemba at the
International Court. However, the NGO says it needs money to
initiate legal aid on behalf of individual victims, and to help
improve their lives. M'Baga, of the Ministry of Social Affairs,
said help may come in the form of a US $55,000 World Bank
emergency aid project grant, called LICUS.
"OCODEFAD will be the main beneficiary of this grant under
the LICUS project," he noted.
M'Baga said he hoped the grant would open the way to another 200
million CFA (approx $377,323) grant by the World Bank, which is
likely to be negotiated in September.
The money is earmarked for sustaining profitable
income-generating activities initiated by any NGO caring for rape
victims, such as Sayo's.
[ This report does not necessarily reflect the views of the United Nations]
Quel avenir pour ces femmes et hommes centrafricains victimes de viols pendant la guerre civile ?
Santé, actions humanitaire - sangonet