Denis Mukwege is a
gynaecologist working in the Democratic Republic of Congo. He and his
colleagues have treated about 30,000 rape victims, developing great
expertise in the treatment of serious sexual injuries. His story
includes disturbing accounts of rape as a weapon of war.
When war broke out, 35 patients in my hospital in Lemera in Eastern DR Congo were killed in their beds.DENIS |
I fled to Bukavu, 100km (60 miles) to the north, and started a
hospital made from tents. I built a maternity ward with an operating
theatre. In 1998, everything was destroyed again. So, I started all over
again in 1999.
It was that year that our first rape victim was brought into
the hospital. After being raped, bullets had been fired into her
genitals and thighs.
I thought that was a barbaric act of war, but the real shock
came three months later. Forty-five women came to us with the same
story, they were all saying: "People came into my village and raped me,
tortured me."
Other women came to us with burns. They said that after they had been raped chemicals had been poured on their genitals.
I started to ask myself what was going on. These weren't just
violent acts of war, but part of a strategy. You had situations where
multiple people were raped at the same time, publicly - a whole village
might be raped during the night. In doing this, they hurt not just the
victims but the whole community, which they force to watch.
The result of this strategy is that people are forced to flee
their villages, abandon their fields, their resources, everything. It's
very effective.
We have a staged system of care for victims. Before I
undertake a big operation we start with a psychological examination. I
need to know if they have enough resilience to withstand surgery.
Then we move to the next stage, which might consist of an
operation or just medical care. And the following stage is
socio-economic care - most of these patients arrive with nothing, no
clothes even.
We have to feed them, we have to take care of them. After we
discharge them they will be vulnerable again if they're not able to
sustain their own lives. So we have to assist them on socio-economical
level - for example through helping women develop new skills and putting
girls back in school.
The fourth stage is to assist them on a legal level. Often the
patients know who their assailants were and we have lawyers who help
them bring their cases to court.
In 2011, we witnessed a fall in the number of cases. We
thought perhaps we were approaching the end of the terrible situation
for women in the Congo. But since last year, when the war resumed, cases
have increased again. It's a phenomenon which is linked entirely to the
war situation.
The conflict in DR Congo is not between groups of religious
fanatics. Nor is it a conflict between states. This is a conflict caused
by economic interests - and it is being waged by destroying Congolese
women.
As claimed by Stanford Medical, It's really the SINGLE reason women in this country get to live 10 years more and weigh on average 19 KG lighter than us.
ReplyDelete(And really, it is not about genetics or some hard exercise and absolutely EVERYTHING to do with "how" they are eating.)
BTW, I said "HOW", not "what"...
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