19 June 2008

Darfur

http://www.cnn.com/2008/WORLD/europe/06/19/darfur.rape/index.html?iref=mpstoryview

ZAM ZAM DISPLACEMENT CAMP, Sudan (CNN) -- Sudan's Darfur crisis has exploded on many fronts -- violence, hunger, displacement and looting -- but United Nations peacekeepers say the biggest issue now affecting the region is the systematic rape of women and children.

UNAMID police officer Ajayi Funmi educates Darfur women about rape.

Thousands of women -- as young as four -- caught in the middle of the struggle between rebel forces and government-backed militias have become victims of rape, they say, with some aid groups claiming it is being used as a weapon of ethnic cleansing.


"That is one of the biggest issues in Darfur -- the rapes, and crimes against women and children," says Michael Fryer, UNAMID's police commissioner, the United Nations peacekeeping force deployed to try to tackle the violence.

Relief workers say they are powerless to stop the attacks and they say if they do speak out they fear the
Sudanese government will tell them to leave the country. Humanitarian group Refugees International in a report last year said rape was "an integral part of the pattern of violence that the government of Sudan is inflicting upon the targeted ethnic groups in Darfur."
Some relief workers say almost 100 percent of women living in aid camps have been raped or become victims of gender-based violence, with many teenagers forced by militiamen to have sex multiple times while running regular errands such as collecting firewood. They say the situation has now become so bad, many women are now resigned to rape attacks as a way of life and men are unwilling to accompany them because they fear they will be killed if they try to defend them.

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But despite the extent of the abuse, the Sudanese government insists there is no problem, adding to the difficulties faced by the victims who are often ostracized by their communities or fall foul of a legal system seen as favoring their attackers.

"There is no rape in Darfur," says Mohammad Hassan Awad, a Humanitarian Aid Commissioner for West Darfur, who accuses foreign aid workers of persuading people in refugee camps to make false claims.

While few aid workers dispute the extent of the attacks against women, they say survivors are unwilling to come forward -- but those that do reveal shocking levels of abuse.

"She said they removed their scarves and used it to tie them up and were taking turns to rape them -- one is 13 years old the other one is 16 years," says Ajayi Funmi of the UNAMID police, who is trying to educate women told CNN after talking to two girls. Making matters worse, aid workers say scores of babies conceived through rape are being dumped by their mothers.

"Abandoned babies are reported but because of the stigma attached to it there is no detailed report because the women don't come forward," says Dr Naqib Safi of the U.N. children's body
UNICEF.

As many as 20 babies a month are being dumped in one camp of 22,000 people.
With both U.N. officials calling for more female officers to better educate women against rape and women saying they won't feel safe until the under-equipped and undermanned United Nations force is strong enough to protect them, the situation shows little sign of improving.


Right now I am sitting in my Dallas, air-conditioned, floor-to-ceiling-windowed office, having just finished a wonderful lunch of Lean Cuisine, an apple, and Teddy Grahams, reading this article, and desperately struggling to comprehend the lives of these women. Like I told my friend Kayla as I g-chatted with her on my HP computer, it doesn't even seem real to me. My suburban-American mind struggles to understand the depths of it all. Wonder why...

I want to say thank you to all my friends traveling to the Sudan very soon. I'm sure there are plenty more than I am unaware are going, but Katie and Susan, you are true blessings. My suffering in comparison to the Sudanese people is like a paper cut on the finger. I am so encouraged by your hearts to give it all away and go love a people that have seen so much cruelty, so much pain, so much evil. Thank you for being a light in the darkness.

Let us not forget to pray for the nations (which is a challenge I need to hear most of all). Various humanitarian and missions organizations pop us from time to time to educate us on things going on worldwide and "rally the troops", but the fervor for the cause eventually dies as the press dies. The strongest army is the Lord's, and our most powerful weapon is prayer. We all look for the opportunity to be the one who is called to go, and I hope that many more friends will receive that calling. But thanks for the little articles to remind us where we should be first and foremost...on our knees.

1 comment:

Anonymous said...

i read that cnn post last week and was horrified as well. govts have been saying that darfur is getting better, clearly not true. i tried to get nic robertson's email address to ask how to create awareness. no luck. i guess its pray for darfur.