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DRC appears to be a nest of maggots.

   Silence=Rape
   by Jan Goodwin


   Last May, 6-year-old Shashir was playing outside her home near Goma,
   in the Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC), when armed militia
   appeared. The terrified child was carried kicking and screaming into
   the bush. There, she was pinned down and gang-raped. Sexually savaged
   and bleeding from multiple wounds, she lay there after the attack,
   how long no one knows, but she was close to starving when finally
   found. Her attackers, who'd disappeared back into the bush, wiped out
   her village as effectively as a biblical plague of locusts.

   "This little girl couldn't walk, couldn't talk when she arrived here.
   Shashir had to be surgically repaired. I don't know if she can be
   mentally repaired," says Faida Veronique, a 47-year-old cook at
   Doctors on Call for Service (DOCS), a tented hospital in the eastern
   city of Goma, who took in the brutalized child.

   "Why do they rape a child?" asks Marie-Madeleine Kisoni, a Congolese
   counselor who works with raped women and children. "We don't
   understand. There's a spirit of bestiality here now. I've seen 2- and
   3-year-olds raped. The rebels want to kill us, but it's more painful
   to kill the spirit instead."

   In the Congo today, age is clearly no protection from rape. A woman
   named Maria was 70 when the Interahamwe, the Hutu militia that led
   Rwanda's 1994 genocide and now number between 20,000 and 30,000 of
   the estimated 140,000 rebels in the DRC, came to her home. "They
   grabbed me, tied my legs apart like a goat before slaughter, and then
   raped me, one after the other," she told me. "Then they stuck sticks
   inside me until I fainted." During the attack Maria's entire
   family--five sons, three daughters and her husband--were murdered.
   "War came. I just saw smoke and fire. Then my life and my health were
   taken away," she says. The tiny septuagenarian with the sunken eyes
   was left with a massive fistula where her bladder was torn, causing
   permanent incontinence. She hid in the bush for three years out of
   fear that the rebels might return, and out of shame over her
   constantly soiled clothes. Yet Maria was one of the more fortunate
   ones. She'd finally made it to a hospital. Two months before we met,
   she had undergone reconstructive surgery. The outcome is uncertain,
   however, and she still requires a catheter.

   Rape has become a defining characteristic of the five-year war in the
   DRC, says Anneke Van Woudenberg, the Congo specialist for Human
   Rights Watch. So, too, has mutilation of the victims. "Last year, I
   was stunned when a 30-year-old woman in North Kivu had her lips and
   ears cut off and eyes gouged out after she was raped, so she couldn't
   identify or testify against her attackers. Now, we are seeing more
   and more such cases," she says. As the rebels constantly seek new
   ways to terrorize, their barbarity becomes more frenzied.

   I, too, was sickened by what I saw and heard. In three decades of
   covering war, I had never before come across the cases described to
   me by Congolese doctors, such as gang-rape victims having their labia
   pierced and then padlocked. "They usually die of massive infection,"
   I was told.

   Based on personal testimonies collected by Human Rights Watch, it is
   estimated that as many as 30 percent of rape victims are sexually
   tortured and mutilated during the assaults, usually with spears,
   machetes, sticks or gun barrels thrust into their vaginas.
   Increasingly, the trigger is being pulled. About 40 percent of rape
   victims, usually the younger ones, aged 8 to 19, are abducted and
   forced to become sex slaves. "The country is in an utter state of
   lawlessness; it's complete anarchy," says Woudenberg. "In this
   culture of impunity, people know they can get away with anything.
   Every armed group is equally culpable."

   In the Congo, rape is a cheaper weapon of war than bullets. Experts
   estimate that some 60 percent of all combatants in the DRC are
   infected with HIV/AIDS. As women rarely have access to expensive
   antiretroviral drugs, sexual assaults all too often become automatic
   death sentences. Médecins Sans Frontières operates five
   health clinics offering antiretrovirals in the conflict zone of
   northeastern DRC, but many women don't know about the drugs and
   cannot travel safely to the centers. Moreover, according to Helen
   O'Neill, a nurse who set up MSF's sexual-violence treatment program,
   such drugs must be taken within forty-eight to seventy-two hours of
   the rape to prevent infection. If a woman has been exposed to the
   virus, the treatment is 80 percent effective. But in the Congo, rape
   victims who are not captive sex slaves must walk for days or weeks,
   often with massive injuries, and risk new capture by roving rebel
   bands, before reaching assistance.

   "So far, 30 percent of rape victims being treated at our hospital are
   infected with HIV/AIDS," says Dr. Denis Mukwege, the French-trained
   medical director of the Panzi Hospital in Bukavu. "And nearly 50
   percent are infected with venereal diseases like syphilis that
   greatly increase their chances of contracting HIV."

   Rape as a weapon of war is as old as war itself. What has changed
   recently is that sexual violence is no longer considered just a
   byproduct of conflict but is being viewed as a war crime, says
   Jessica Neuwirth, president of Equality Now, a New York-based
   international women's human rights organization. "Rape as a
   violation of war was codified in the Geneva Convention, but only now
   is it being taken seriously. But it is still not effectively
   prosecuted, not proportional to the extent that sexual violence
   takes place," she says. Armed forces now have a legal obligation to
   stop rape and hold the offenders accountable. "This is a major shift
   in consciousness. But it needs to be followed by a major shift in
   conduct," says Neuwirth.

   In the DRC, rape is used to terrorize, humiliate and punish the
   enemy. Frequently husbands, fathers and children are forced to watch
   and even participate. Women sexually assaulted by members of one
   rebel organization are accused of being the wives of that group and
   raped again as punishment when a new militia takes over the area.
   "It's happened repeatedly to the women of Shabunda in the far east of
   the Congo, every time the region has changed hands," says Woudenberg.

   Even the camps for internally displaced people are not safe. The
   barbed-wire encampment in Bunia is home to more than 14,000 people,
   but enemy militia infiltrate at night. Shortly before I arrived, an
   11-year-old girl was dragged off and gang-raped, a not uncommon
   occurrence. There are more than 3 million internally displaced people
   made homeless by the war, many of whom have been forced to flee over
   and over again. UN officers admit they have nowhere near the numbers
   they need to be effective, or even to stay safe themselves.

   "The rebels are all around us here. We don't feel secure and we've
   seen what these guys do to people, especially to women and girls. Our
   own people have been killed, after they were horribly tortured," a
   European UN major told me. "The DRC is the size of Western Europe.
   We're supposed to have 8,500 troops here, but we've only got 5,000! I
   was in Bosnia, which is a fraction of the size of the Congo, and we
   had 68,000 NATO troops, and even that wasn't enough." Patrols of
   MONUC, the UN's peacekeeping force in the DRC, have refused to pick
   up wounded rape victims and escort them to medical care when they
   were afraid they would be outnumbered by nearby rebels.

   "People denounce the rapes but do nothing to bring the rebels to
   justice," says Woudenberg. "There isn't the political will,
   domestically or internationally, to make it happen. I've never seen
   anything like this, when war has become this horrible, and human life
   so undervalued."

   Trevor Lowe, spokesperson for the UN World Food Program, echoes this
   view. "The nature of sexual violence in the DRC conflict is
   grotesque, completely abnormal," he says. "Babies, children,
   women--nobody is being spared. For every woman speaking out, there
   are hundreds who've not yet emerged from the hell. Rape is so
   stigmatized in the DRC, and people are afraid of reprisals from
   rebels. It's a complete and utter breakdown of norms. Like Rwanda,
   only worse." Adds his colleague Christiane Berthiaume, "Never before
   have we found as many victims of rape in conflict situations as we
   are discovering in the DRC."

   Yet where is the international media coverage? The outrage? The
   demand for justice?

   During the Rwanda genocide, rape as a war crime received extensive
   international media coverage. Despite initial reports of 250,000
   women being sexually assaulted (a third more than there were Tutsi
   women living in the country at the time), evidence later suggested
   the total number was closer to one-fifth of that.

   In Bosnia, where the European Community Investigative Mission
   concluded there were some 20,000 victims, reports of systematic rape
   by the Serbs first made international headlines one year into the
   war, and remained a major news focus for the remaining three years
   of the conflict. It was only after the Bosnia war, at the
   International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia in The
   Hague in 1997, that rape was first prosecuted as a crime against
   humanity. A year later, at the Rwanda tribunal, rape was found to be
   a form of genocide.

   Everyone I spoke with in the DRC and in the international UN, NGO and
   human rights community said they believe the incidence of rape there
   greatly exceeds that in both Bosnia and Rwanda, although it will be
   years before precise figures are available. The systematic nature of
   the assaults has been amply documented by the UN, humanitarian
   agencies and human rights organizations. Yet for the most part the
   media look the other way. As one editor of a national newspaper told
   me, "It's just another horror in the horror that is Africa." One has
   to ask, Does this kind of cynicism merely reflect public opinion or
   help create it?

   Says Lowe, "Look at the square footage of Bosnia, a country that is
   dwarfed by the Congo, and look at the enormous number of reporters
   who covered Bosnia compared to the DRC. Clearly, Africa doesn't get
   the same coverage as Europe. The reasons are racial, geopolitical
   interests, ease of access, etc. The DRC conflict is an extremely
   dangerous one, which is one reason the press is not there. Selling
   Africa, and being part of an agency that does it all the time, is
   difficult. Africa is clearly not a place where the major powers have
   a lot of interest. The Congo is not on the geopolitical map. And the
   major-league press follows that geopolitical map." There is also
   media faddishness, what Lowe refers to as the CNN factor. "If CNN
   shows up, then other reporters become interested," he says.

   Another factor is the complexity of the Congo conflict. In Rwanda,
   the media were able to present the issues as clear-cut, with the good
   guys and the bad clearly defined. "People consider the Congo conflict
   confusing; they label it tribal or ethnic, which is totally wrong,"
   says Woudenberg. "The war in the DRC has been an international war,
   involving a number of different countries."

   Conduct a straw poll among Americans who are usually well informed
   and few know of the vicious campaign of sexual violence against
   women in the DRC. Many are even unaware that the country is six
   years into a brutal conflict, in which up to 4.7 million people have
   died--the highest number of fatalities in any conflict since World
   War II. Or that six countries--Rwanda, Burundi, Uganda, Zimbabwe,
   Angola and Namibia--have been fighting proxy wars in the DRC, and
   helping to plunder the country's tremendous mineral wealth to fill
   their coffers.

   The indifference, according to Woudenberg, extends to the arms of
   government that should be most deeply concerned with the DRC's
   crisis. "In November I tried to raise the issue with the US Mission
   to the UN in New York, and they told me fairly point-blank that they
   were aware rape was going on in the Congo, and it was just not high
   on their priorities," she says. "I had a similar response from the US
   State Department."

   Meanwhile, a UN Security Council panel has cited eighty-five
   multinational corporations, including some of the largest US
   companies in their fields, for their involvement in the illegal
   exploitation of natural resources from the DRC. The commerce in these
   "blood" minerals, such as coltan, used in cell phones and laptops,
   cobalt, copper, gold, diamonds and uranium (Congolese uranium was
   used in the atomic bombs dropped on Hiroshima and Nagasaki), drives
   the conflict. The brutality of the militias--the sexual slavery,
   transmission of HIV/AIDS through rape, cannibalism, slaughter and
   starvation, forced recruitment of child soldiers--has routinely been
   employed to secure access to mining sites or insure a supply of
   captive labor.

   If that isn't enough to awaken the international community's
   interest, one would think it would be of concern that "blood"
   business practices also fund terrorism. Lebanese diamond traders
   benefiting from illegal concessions in the Congo have been tied to
   the Islamic extremist groups Amal and Hezbollah. According to a UN
   report, the Lebanese traders, who operate licensed diamond businesses
   in Antwerp, purchased diamonds from the DRC worth $150 million in
   2001 alone. Such linkage between African rebel groups and global
   terrorist movements is not new. Sierra Leone's Revolutionary United
   Front reportedly sold diamonds to Al Qaeda, thus helping to finance
   both organizations.

   The lobbies of the two luxury hotels in Kinshasa, the DRC's capital,
   are full of elegant, $5,000-a-day corporate lawyers from New York,
   London and Geneva, and scruffier diamond dealers from Tel Aviv and
   Antwerp, as they while away the hours waiting for government
   ministers and senior representatives of armed groups to smooth their
   way. These institutional fortune-makers are 1,800 miles away from the
   nightmares of northeastern Congo. Yet they are not so far removed
   from the atrocities perpetrated there. Rape is a crime of the war
   they are fueling with their greed.

   Today's conflict profiteers are not the first to sponsor a campaign
   to ransack, rape, pillage and plunder in the Congo. A century ago,
   Belgium's King Leopold II amassed a fabulous fortune this way. During
   the monarch's genocidal reign of terror, when villagers couldn't meet
   his impossibly high quotas harvesting rubber or mining ore, their
   hands were amputated and women were taken as slaves. By the time he
   was finished, an estimated 10 million Congolese, half the population,
   were dead.

   Kinshasa's policy-makers, who serve in a government with four vice
   presidents in a misguided attempt to appease various factions, now
   claim a new political beginning after the so-called peace accord last
   year. But there is a "huge and dangerous gap" between what is
   happening in Kinshasa and what is going on in the northeast, says
   Irene Khan, Amnesty International's secretary general. "In Kinshasa
   there is talk of peace and political progress, of regional harmony
   and democratic elections. But while the newly appointed members of
   government are wrangling for power and privilege in Kinshasa, in the
   Kivus and Ituri people are confronted daily with death, plunder and
   carnage. Mutilations and massacres continue. Rape of women and girls
   has become a standard tactic of warfare. It is absolutely outrageous
   that many of the senior members of the government and the political
   parties they represent are closely linked to the armed groups who are
   committing these abuses."

   At the time of King Leopold's predatory rule, an international
   Congo reform movement was formed with the support of Mark Twain,
   Arthur Conan Doyle and Joseph Conrad. It was Conrad who described
   what was being done as "the vilest scramble for loot that ever
   disfigured the history of human conscience." He would recognize
   what is happening now.

   For the sake of 6-year-old Shashir and tens of thousands of girls and
   women who have been infected with HIV/AIDS, forcibly impregnated or
   so badly damaged internally they will never be able to have children,
   and who are so psychologically traumatized they may never recover, we
   can only hope that a similarly prominent group of today's social
   commentators will find its conscience and its voice soon.


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