The rape of Congo's women
Thousands of victims left with vaginal fistula
Doctors classify gang sex attacks as crimes of combat

EMILY WAX
SPECIAL TO THE STAR

BUKAVU, Congo-She walks slowly in padded slippers inside a hospital ward.

Bohoro Nyagakon, 30, is a woman with gentle eyes and a frail 5-foot frame,
with a friendly 5-year-old daughter, Farjeka, playing nearby.

She is waiting in this cramped room - with dozens of others - to undergo a
harrowing procedure: reconstruction of her vagina.

Gang rape has been so violent, so systematic, so common in eastern Congo
during the country's five years of war that thousands of women are suffering
from vaginal fistula, leaving them unable to control bodily functions and
enduring ostracism and the threat of debilitating lifelong health problems.

Around the world, cases of ruptured vaginal tissue are usually caused by
early childbirth and seen in such African countries as Ethiopia, Nigeria and
Mali, where brides as young as 12 are too small to give birth.

What makes the fistula cases in Congo so jarring to medical professionals
here is the large number of them caused by rape.

In the past few months, as a peace agreement has taken hold and fighting has
slowed, the extent of the brutality has become evident, physicians say.

There are so many cases being reported that the destruction of the vagina is
considered a war injury and recorded by doctors as a crime of combat.

"There are thousands of violated ladies showing up. It's like nothing we
have ever seen anywhere in the world," says Jo Lusi, head of a Congolese-run
hospital in the eastern city of Goma that is working with the U.S.-based aid
group Doctors on Call for Service.

"We are here repairing an organ that is so important to women and to our
country and to our dignity."

The U.N. Children's Fund is building a special ward at the hospital for
women suffering from fistula and other effects of rape.

"Imagine, that this is what the war in Congo has come to," says Lusi. "What
could be more terrible for our women and our families?"

Village health posts are reporting far more cases than those arriving at
hospitals, because journeys from the country's interior are long and
difficult, according to health-care workers at the British aid agency
Merlin.

"I think we are addressing the tip of the iceberg because access to health
care is so limited," says David Tu, a doctor at the Bukavu branch of Doctors
Without Borders-Holland.

"For every one case, there could be 30 more in the rural areas that we
aren't hearing about."

Still, doctors say hundreds of women have arrived in recent months in Goma,
Bukavu, Shabunda and several other cities in eastern Congo to wait for an
operation that will deliver them from life as a village recluse - unable to
work or to have children or sexual relations.

Local women's groups have joined to help victims make long journeys by foot
through the jungle to city hospitals.

Some patients go through three or even four painful operations - each
requiring 21 days of bed rest. Each operation costs about $300 (U.S.) and is
paid for by international donations.

In Congo, it is often said that women have paid the highest price in the war
that began in 1998, pitting government forces against rebels backed by
Uganda and Rwanda.

Young soldiers from the dozens of factions that roam eastern Congo - wired
on cocaine, drunk on palm wine - have turned rape into a primary weapon of
war, as common as looting or setting a hut afire.

Rape has even been encouraged by commanders as a way to gain control of
food, water and firewood, intimidating the women on a continent where women
do nearly all the labour in the fields.

An estimated 3.5 million people in Congo have died in the past five years,
mostly from disease and starvation.

Rape has become so prevalent that some aid groups estimate that one in every
three women is a victim. With Congo lacking a functioning court system, no
one has been punished.

But there has been a remarkable response by eastern Congolese women, who at
times have launched spectacular - and in Africa, unheard-of - protests to
bring attention to the issue.

In March, for instance, hundreds of women stripped naked in the centre of
Goma and challenged thousands of dumbfounded onlookers, mostly men.

"If you are going to rape us, rape us now, because this must stop today,"
Mama Jeanne Banyere, head of the Federation of Protestant Women in Goma,
recalls telling the crowd.

As the men stood watching, the women chanted that they would no longer
accept rape in the community. They demanded health care for women suffering
from fistula, who were being abandoned by their husbands and ostracized by
their communities.

"So many women have it and so many were raped," says Banyere. "Some were
even raped by men sticking branches and guns up their vaginas.

"We couldn't just cry. Everywhere in the country there are women crying
because of this. We had to fight back."

After the protest, health-care workers at Doctors on Call for Service moved
quickly to find Congolese physicians who could perform the operations for
fistula patients.

They predicted in April that they would need to perform only 50 such
surgeries. Instead, they have done more than 150 of the operations.

` Everywhere in the country there are women crying because of this'

Mama Jeanne Banyere, Federation of Protestant Women in Goma

Inside a ranch-style complex of wards, 55 women are housed under white tents
in what used to be the hospital's garden.

Girls as young as 8 and women as old as 73 sit on small wire cots wrapped in
gray blankets donated by UNICEF. All are rape victims and are being
counselled for trauma.

Some say they considered killing themselves after surviving multiple rapes.
Some have puddles of urine under their seats because of their condition.

A vast majority of the women in the tents are waiting for operations,
sometimes a second or third procedure. About 10 more women arrive each week,
doctors say.

Bohoro Nyagakon is waiting for her third procedure at the Panzi Hospital in
Bukavu, capital of South Kivu province.

The story of how she arrived here began on May 12, 2002, when rebel fighters
demanded that she disrobe in her home.

It was 8 p.m. She was eight months' pregnant and had finished a long day of
cooking and washing. She was resting in the sitting room of her small hut.

"Five of them came at me," she says, looking down.

"I closed my eyes.

"They told my husband to get in another room and they held him down. They
were shouting that they would kill him.

"Then, they each had sex with me, five of them. Afterward, I was so bruised
and my mind was shutting off."

After the rebels left, Nyagakon's husband carried her through the banana
trees under the cover of darkness and on to a boat for the five-hour ride
from her town of Niabembe to Kabare, where there was a hospital.

In the middle of the night, doctors had to cut her abdomen open and remove
the dead fetus.

"Afterward, my mind was really gone," Nyagakon says, her eyes tearing. "I
was thinking how would I survive like this."

Her husband, who teaches the Bible at a local church, took her home and was
kind to her, she says. For that she feels lucky, because many husbands leave
wives with vaginal fistula.

Nyagakon stayed in bed for 10 months trying to survive the humiliation of a
condition that often leaves women foul-smelling because of a tear in the
bladder or the rectum.

In some villages, women with fistula are told to sleep with animals.

She just sat in bed crying and trying to stop the endless flow of urine and
feces. Finally, a friend of her husband told him of a place in Bukavu where
she could have an operation.

They left right away on the two-day journey. When she arrived, she was sad
to see so many women suffering from the same affliction. "My heart was
hurting," she says.

But in another way, she was happy to be among those who would not judge her
or make fun of her illness.

"I was feeling better because I couldn't survive this way," she says. "I was
thinking I might be okay again."

Her first operation, which took nearly four hours, was unsuccessful; doctors
say it was because she had suffered such severe ruptures to her bladder
wall.

The second operation, three months later, went far better. She can now
control most of her bodily functions.

Sitting in her doctor's office, where drawings that depict soldiers raping a
woman warn of such acts, she is encouraging other women to talk about what
they went through.

One woman in the hospital was shot in her vagina with a gun. Another was
taken as a slave of a rebel group and gang-raped for months.

Some of the women are pregnant; others are HIV-positive. The hospital has
had 897 rape cases since March.

"We are good, good friends," Nyagakon says. "If I see a woman who is sad, I
help her."

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