Current:Home > Invest‘I wanted to scream': Growing conflict in Congo drives sexual assault against displaced women -ProfitLogic
‘I wanted to scream': Growing conflict in Congo drives sexual assault against displaced women
View
Date:2025-04-16 02:46:36
BULENGO, Congo (AP) — A hooded man burst into the 42-year-old woman’s tent while her children were out searching for food, then raped her in the displacement camp where she had fled war in eastern Congo.
“I wanted to scream (but) he took my mouth and he threatened me with death,” said the mother of four, who was abandoned by her husband after she became disabled in a motorcycle accident several years ago.
Now, she says, she lives in fear and hesitates to let her children leave her side.
Sexual violence by armed men against displaced women is increasing rapidly in eastern Congo as yearslong conflicts continue. The trend underscores the disproportionate consequences for women and girls in the region’s perpetual state of war. The Associated Press is not identifying survivors who spoke to journalists in the Bulengo displacement camp.
In Bulengo and other displacement sites nearby, an average of 70 sexual assault victims each day visit clinics run by Doctors Without Borders, also known by its French acronym MSF.
Conflict has simmered in eastern Congo for nearly three decades. The United Nations estimates that more than 130 armed groups are active in the country’s northeast, vying for land or resources while some have formed to protect their communities. Sexual violence has long been used as a weapon of war by armed fighters in the region.
More than 4 million people were displaced within Congo because of conflict in 2022, the most in Africa and second in the world only to Ukraine, according to the Internal Displacement Monitoring Center. Of nearly 100,000 people who arrived at displacement sites near the eastern city of Goma in July, nearly 60% were women and girls, according to the International Organization for Migration.
Doctors Without Borders treated 1,500 female victims of sexual violence in just three displacement camps outside Goma in July, more than double the number in May, the organization said in a Sept. 18 report.
Survivors and aid workers say displacement rips people from their livelihoods and leaves women and girls vulnerable to assault.
Like many other displaced single mothers, the 42-year-old mother of four is struggling to feed her family and unsure when she might return home.
With the help of her two sons and two daughters, she had cultivated her fields of cassava, potatoes and beans. But in February, armed rebels and Congolese security forces clashed close to her home in the northeastern village of Karenga.
“We were forced to flee, leaving behind all our belongings,” she said. Limping, she walked an entire day to bring her family to one of more than 100 sites where displaced people have gathered around Goma.
One May evening, after three months of struggling to feed her family in a camp with tens of thousands of other displaced people, she sent her children to find food. They hadn’t eaten all day, she said. That’s when a stranger found her alone and raped her.
After the attack, she confided in a friend who directed her to a clinic run by MSF. The charity group along with United Nations agencies and local organizations help provide medical services, psychological treatment, latrines and other measures to improve conditions for survivors of sexual violence.
But their role is limited. Deliveries of food and other basic needs to the camp are infrequent, said Rebecca Kihiu, MSF’s regional sexual violence activity manager.
The camp’s conditions leave women vulnerable to abuse. Shelters are little more than plastic sheets, with no way of securing them from intruders, Kihiu said. Armed men lurk outside the camp, where women and girls are forced to venture to find firewood and other necessities.
“They know that they will go and find these assaults outside the camp. But they have no option,” Kihiu said.
Already scarred by fleeing their homes, survivors of sexual assault in camps like Bulengo live with the experience long afterward. “It’s a trauma that will stay for a lifetime,” said Esmeralda Alabre, coordinator for UNFPA gender-based violence programming in northeast Congo.
A mother of eight in the same displacement camp received some medical help after she was raped. But she is still afraid, especially at night. She now arranges her children around her when they sleep, hoping their presence will deter a future aggressor.
Kihiu says some groups of women band together on trips outside the camp for added security, but this tactic falters if they need to split up to collect resources more efficiently.
For hundreds of thousands of other displaced women in northeast Congo, escalating armed conflict stands in the way of a return to normal life. The two women interviewed by the AP said they think each day about how they can return to farming in their village.
And each night they fear for their safety.
“Let the government do everything to end this war so that we can give up this life of misery,” the mother of four said.
___
Irwin reported from Dakar, Senegal.
veryGood! (72)
Related
- Angelina Jolie nearly fainted making Maria Callas movie: 'My body wasn’t strong enough'
- Advance Auto Parts is closing hundreds of stores in an effort to turn its business around
- Halle Berry surprises crowd in iconic 2002 Elie Saab gown from her historic Oscar win
- Falling scaffolding plank narrowly misses pedestrians at Boston’s South Station
- Where will Elmo go? HBO moves away from 'Sesame Street'
- Today’s Savannah Guthrie, Al Roker and More React to Craig Melvin Replacing Hoda Kotb as Co-Anchor
- Shel Talmy, produced hits by The Who, The Kinks and other 1960s British bands, dead at 87
- New York nursing home operator accused of neglect settles with state for $45M
- Small twin
- J.Crew Outlet Quietly Drops Their Black Friday Deals - Save Up to 70% off Everything, Styles Start at $12
Ranking
- A White House order claims to end 'censorship.' What does that mean?
- Who will save Florida athletics? Gators need fixing, and it doesn't stop at Billy Napier
- Man is 'not dead anymore' after long battle with IRS, which mistakenly labeled him deceased
- UFC 309: Jon Jones vs. Stipe Miocic fight card, odds, how to watch, date
- Skins Game to make return to Thanksgiving week with a modern look
- The Best Gifts for Men – That He Won’t Want to Return
- Ex-Marine misused a combat technique in fatal chokehold of NYC subway rider, trainer testifies
- New York races to revive Manhattan tolls intended to fight traffic before Trump can block them
Recommendation
US wholesale inflation accelerated in November in sign that some price pressures remain elevated
USMNT Concacaf Nations League quarterfinal Leg 1 vs. Jamaica: Live stream and TV, rosters
See Blake Shelton and Gwen Stefani's Winning NFL Outing With Kids Zuma and Apollo
Mother of Man Found Dead in Tanning Bed at Planet Fitness Gym Details His Final Moments
Toyota to invest $922 million to build a new paint facility at its Kentucky complex
Bridgerton's Luke Newton Details His Physical Transformation for Season 3's Leading Role
Will Aaron Rodgers retire? Jets QB tells reporters he plans to play in 2025
Democrat Janelle Bynum flips Oregon’s 5th District, will be state’s first Black member of Congress