Central African Republic: Widespread Rape, Sexual Slavery by Armed Groups as Weapon of War
Armed groups are using rape in a brutal, calculated way to punish
and terrorize women and girls. Every day, survivors live with the
devastating aftermath of rape, and the knowledge that their attackers
are walking free, perhaps holding positions of power, and to date facing
no consequences whatsoever.
Armed groups in the Central African Republic
have used rape and sexual slavery as a tactic of war across the country
during nearly five years of conflict, Human Rights Watch said in a
report released today. Commanders have tolerated widespread sexual
violence by their forces and, in some cases, appear to have ordered it
or committed it themselves.
The 176-page report, “‘They Said We Are Their Slaves,’ Sexual Violence by Armed Groups in the Central African Republic,”
documents 305 cases of rape and sexual slavery carried out against 296
women and girls by members of armed groups between early 2013 and
mid-2017. The predominantly Muslim Seleka and the largely Christian and
animist militia known as “anti-balaka,” two main parties to the
conflict, have used sexual violence as revenge for perceived support of
those on the other side of the sectarian divide.
HRW interviewed 296 survivors of sexual slavery and rape. These are some of their stories.
“Armed groups are using rape in a brutal, calculated way to punish and terrorize women and girls,” said Hillary Margolis,
women’s rights researcher at Human Rights Watch. “Every day, survivors
live with the devastating aftermath of rape, and the knowledge that
their attackers are walking free, perhaps holding positions of power,
and to date facing no consequences whatsoever.”
Human Rights Watch interviewed 296 survivors of rape and sexual
slavery, 52 of them girls at the time of the attacks, as well as
government officials, police, medical personnel, United Nations
officials, and others.
Due to stigma, under-reporting by survivors, and security-related
restrictions on research, the full number of sexual violence incidents
by armed groups during the conflict is undoubtedly higher, Human Rights
Watch said.
Most of the abuses documented are not only crimes under Central
African law, but also constitute war crimes. In some cases, they may
constitute crimes against humanity. But to date not a single member of
any armed group is known to have been arrested or tried for committing
sexual violence.
The documented cases of sexual violence by fighters in this report
constitute torture, and in many cases the torture was not limited to the
sexual violence itself, but was accompanied by other forms of abuse
also amounting to torture. Survivors were raped by up to 10 or more men
during a single incident. During attacks, fighters whipped women and
girls, tied them up for long periods, burned them, and threatened them
with death. Survivors reported injuries ranging from broken bones and
smashed teeth to internal injuries and head trauma. Thirteen survivors,
three of whom were children at the time of the attacks, said they became
pregnant from the rapes.
“Each day, four [anti-balaka] came to have sex with me in the
morning. Then five men at 3 p.m. and again at 7 p.m. In the morning four
men, in the afternoon and evening, the commander plus four men…. They
said, ‘You look like a Christian girl. You sell your sex to Muslims.
Today you will see.’” – “Rachida” 25 (all survivors’ names have been changed)
Rape
“When one [Seleka fighter] took me by force, my husband said, ‘No,
that’s a poor woman. Don’t do anything to her.’ One came and told him to
be quiet and that he should undress. …. The leader said, ‘Me, I’m going
to sleep with her husband.’ When I lowered my head, he told me to lift
my head and watch. …Two came and took my two legs. They held them open.
When the first one finished raping me, he called another one to bring a
piece of clothing. He took [the clothing] and put it inside my vagina to
clean out where the first man had been. I didn’t know what to do but
scream. It hurt too much.
My daughter was crying. One said, ‘Why is the child crying like
that?’ I heard them shoot the child. I cried to Jesus, ‘How can you
allow this to happen?’ I just cried for my child…. I heard them fire and
then it was silent. I didn’t hear her anymore. They shot my husband in
the head with two bullets…. Before they raped me, I saw them start to
torture him.” - “Irene,” 36
“One [anti-balaka fighter] said, ‘You need to take your clothes off
so that we can have sex with you.’ I said, ‘I am still a virgin.’ He
said, ‘If you are still a virgin, then we will break you in today.’ One
ripped my clothes off and the other ripped off my underwear…. One
grabbed my throat and threw me on the ground. He held my mouth shut
while the first man raped me. I started to bleed. When the first was
done the second man said, ‘I can’t leave you like this, I must rape you
too.’ So he raped me as well.” – “Priscille,” 16, who said the men also raped her 10-year-old sister
Impact of Sexual Violence
“I was traumatized because on the street people would say, ‘There she
is, the woman who was raped by the Seleka.’ At the house, my husband
said, ‘You accepted that the Seleka raped you. Why did you not cry out?
Take your things and leave.’” – “Yvette,” 27
“What am I going to do with this baby? I did not want it. Who will
take care of it? My family is all dead and I have a murderer’s baby.” – “Béatrice,” 18, pregnant following rape by an anti-balaka fighter
Access to Services
“They told me to pay for medicines and I don’t have the means. It was
for injections, serums, antibiotics – 4,500 CFA (US$7.67), 2500 CFA
(US$4.26)…. [The doctor] did a consultation. He said I had internal
injuries. I explained the rape to him. They didn’t do an HIV test. He
told me that to do an HIV test I had to pay 1500 CFA (US$2.56).” – “Lorraine,” 30
Access to Justice
“When I would see them [moving around town], I was so scared, but
there is no law here so I would go into my hut and cry…. [I]f the courts
opened, then I would open a case [against them]. But I did not go to
the gendarmes, because there you have to pay, and in the end, they do
nothing.” – “Cecile,” 50
“They killed my husband, raped me, I don’t have my house, I’m
infected [with HIV] – that’s what they have done to me. I want to bring
them to justice because they have ruined my life. – “Mélanie,” 31
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