Photo: Hannah McNeish/IRIN. South Sudan’s ongoing violence puts women at risk of sexual and gender based violence.
Source: IRIN
JUBA, 13 May 2014 (IRIN) - Sexual and gender-based violence might not be
a new phenomenon in South Sudan, but the current crisis and the near
absence of protection for civilians has exacerbated it, analysts say.
“We do know that it [sexual and gender-based violence] is a major issue.
Even though many victims of sexual violence do not report their ordeal
because of the stigma that it carries, wherever we went we met women
and girls who told us that they had been raped by either government or
opposition forces,” Donatella Rovera, senior crisis response adviser at
Amnesty International, told IRIN.
On 8 May, Amnesty International released a report
in which it documented atrocities committed against civilians,
including rape and sexual violence, by the two warring parties in South
Sudan’s five-month old conflict.
“The current militarized environment, where armed men are ubiquitous and
civilian law enforcement is virtually absent, places women and girls at
a heightened risk of sexual violence. Persistent reports of sexual
violence perpetrated by both government and opposition forces strongly
indicate that conflict-related sexual violence is widespread,” Amnesty
International said in its report.
“We received testimonies from women and girls victims of sexual violence
from all the main conflict-affected areas: Juba and areas in Unity,
Jonglei and Upper Nile states,” Amnesty International’s Rovera, told
IRIN.
In its report,
also released on 8 May, the UN Mission in South Sudan (UNMISS) noted
that the “conflict has exacerbated the vulnerability of women and
children in South Sudan to sexual violence.”
In the report, UNMISS said: “All parties to the conflict have committed
acts of rape and other forms of sexual violence against women of
different ethnic groups. Credible information suggests that sexual
violence took place in connection with the occurrence of human rights
and humanitarian law violations before, during, and after heavy
fighting, shelling, looting, and house searches.”
It added: “Women of nationalities of neighboring countries were also
targeted. The forms of sexual violence used during the conflict include
rape, sometimes with an object (guns or bullets), gang-rape, abduction
and sexual slavery, and forced abortion. In some instances, women’s
bodies were mutilated and, in at least one instance, women were forced
to go outside of their homes naked.”
In Central Equatoria State, for instance, UNMISS reported that sexual
violence increased during “the days following 15 December. At least 27
incidents were documented, of which 22 incidents were attributed to
Government security forces and mainly to the SPLA [Sudan People’s
Liberation Army]. These include 14 incidents of rape and gang-rape, one
attempted rape and four cases of sexual slavery…
“For example, in the days following 15 December, Nuer women were stopped
in a street of Juba by SPLA soldiers and taken to unknown places. They
were then assigned to soldiers who repeatedly raped them. In some
instances, survivors were subsequently taken as `wives’ by the soldiers.
On 16 December, three girls under 18 years old were gang-raped by SPLA
soldiers when they broke into their house and found them alone.”
Testimony
Monica*, a 27-year-old mother of six, lies on a bed inside a makeshift tent in a protection of civilians camp in Tomping as she recounts
how she was repeatedly raped in Gudele, a densely populated area in the
capital, by suspected government troops. Just a few hours after the
violence began; troops loyal to the government overran parts of Juba,
shooting indiscriminately at civilians, leaving many dead and thousands
more injured. Monica’s 35-year-old husband was among those killed in the
attacks.
“They came and kicked our door and got in and they hit us with gun butts
and told us to lie down. They were asking my husband about guns but he
didn’t have any. They wanted to know our ethnicity too. They raped me -
each of them. I don’t know how many they were. They then killed my
husband,” Monica told IRIN.
She was five months pregnant when the rape happened. Three months later,
she lost her pregnancy. Monica is still too afraid to return home
despite Juba experiencing some relative peace.
“I don’t want to go back now. It is scary for me what I went through.
Now you can see I’m sick. I don’t how to start when I go back and I’m
not sure this [the rape ordeal] will not happen again,” she said.
Alcohol and drug abuse
Even those sheltered in UN bases are not safe. A camp manager in Tomping
anonymously told IRIN of cases where women are reportedly harassed.
“Women and girls are harassed at night. Many are even too fearful to
bathe at night or go out to the toilet. Those women who are living alone
are constantly harassed by young men here. It is big problem,” he said.
He added that alcohol and drug abuse had made cases of sexual harassment in the camps even worse.
“The men and boys here have nothing to do and they get alcohol. When
they take alcohol or abuse other drugs, they become unruly. Husbands are
abusing their wives, and girls are constantly chased in the dark. You
can hear noises and screams at night.”
According to the UN Population Fund (UNFPA), an estimated 10,000
displaced women and girls who are currently living in areas which are
inaccessible to aid organizations are at risk of sexual violence.
“There is need to put more attention on the protection of displaced
populations. Unless this can be done, the number of women and girls
facing sexual violence could increase considerably due to high
insecurity and the loss of community protection mechanisms as a result
of the conflict. We have reports of women and girls being raped when
they go out to look for food or firewood,” Julitta Onabanjo, UNFPA
regional director, told IRIN.
Aid workers told IRIN that fear to report rape within the community, and
insecurity, had made it even harder to reach or treat survivors.
“It is even harder to reach those women and girls who have been raped
and are living outside the camps. But here in the camp, at least we have
a few trusted community volunteers who have been able to refer cases to
us and we counsel and where possible, we treat survivors,” an aid
worker who preferred anonymty , told IRIN from a temporary camp in
Awerial County in Lakes State.
UNFPA said: “Awareness of the benefits of early reporting of rape cases
is still low among community members, and often cases are reported well
after the 72 hours required for administering lifesaving treatments such
as antiretrovirals and emergency contraception.”
Amnesty’s Rovera said: “There are NGOs which are providing medical and
psycho-social assistance to those survivors of sexual violence who are
accessible, notably in the camps for displaced people in UN bases.
However, only a very small percentage of those displaced by the conflict
- less than 10 percent - are in the camps in UN bases. The majority are
sheltering in remote rural areas, with little or no access to
humanitarian assistance of any kind.”
Over one million people have so far been displaced since the conflict
began. On 5 May President Salva Kiir and rebel leader Riek Machar penned
a deal to cease hostilities for at least one month to allow for the
evacuation of civilians caught up in the conflict.
*Not a real name