. Space Industry and Business News .




.
AFRICA NEWS
DR Congo villagers spurn raped wives
by Staff Writers
Nakiele, Dr Congo (AFP) July 6, 2011

After being raped by government troops, women in the eastern Democratic Republic of Congo face the further pain and humiliation of being repudiated by their husbands.

"My husband refuses to share the bed with me. I sleep on the floor," one woman who asked not to be named told AFP in the eastern village of Nakiele, where soldiers raped more than 100 women in early June.

"My husband also rejects the meals I cook for him. He eats the ones my sisters make for him. I don't understand why I should be abandoned," said the woman, who is 19 years old with a six-month-old baby.

In Nakiele, a village of 12,300 inhabitants perched on a hill overlooking the Fizi plateau in Sud-Kivu province, 121 women told a hospital doctor that they were raped on the night of June 11 by renegade troops.

Since that night, more than a dozen of them have been disowned by their husbands.

On the fateful day, when more than 150 army deserters led by a colonel, former members of a local Mai-Mai tribal militia, approached the isolated village, the men of the community fled into the bush.

They abandoned the women and the children for fear of being abducted as porters by the soldiers, who would beat them if they refused. Only a few men stayed behind, including the village headman and the doctor, with his nurses.

In two other villages in the same region, 127 women have reported being raped by the same troops.

During successive military operations since 2009 against armed groups in the region, soldiers arrived in villages and "asked for rations, a goat, and the women were left in peace. But this time, it ended badly," the headman of Nakiele, Losema Etamo Ngoma, told AFP.

When her husband returned on the morning of June 12 after the soldiers had gone, a 20-year-old woman told him that she had been raped.

"He told me that now I'm a soldier's wife, that I should go with the soldiers and not stay here. But he hasn't yet chased me away," the woman told AFP.

"I don't understand why he said that," she added, fiddling mechanically with the knot of the sling that held her one-year-old baby in a cradle on her back.

Rape is such a taboo in much of the DR Congo that the victims keep quiet rather than risk being rejected by their husbands, their families, and indeed the whole community.

Yet relief agencies estimate that scores of thousands of women have been raped by armed men in the successive conflicts that have ravaged the country, before and since a bloody war that drew in half a dozen other nations between 1999 and 2003.

In Nakiele, "the women have had the courage to speak out. There was a mass movement and non-governmental organisations intervened to have them tell their stories," said Eugene Byamoni, a psychologist who consulted about 50 of the women on June 16 and 17.

"I'm ashamed to go through the village. I'm the object of criticism, of teasing, people say that I'm a soldier's wife, carrying a disease," murmured a woman aged 28 and accused of having the AIDS virus since the rape.

Her husband has told her "to go away and leave the bed".

"We need to get together the men and the women, to make them aware, to tell them that the misfortune that has happened is not the fault of the women," the 28-year-old said.

"Since the problem arose, I've brought together a group of 10 elders to talk to the men, so that they can still live with these women, explaining to them that what happened to the women was done by force, against their will, and that they have to live with that," village chief Ngoma said.

Ngoma asked for professional help because "the group of elders has no technique. We need specialists to come and teach them methods as quickly as possible, because otherwise households will continue to fall apart."




Related Links
Africa News - Resources, Health, Food

.
Get Our Free Newsletters Via Email
...
Buy Advertising Editorial Enquiries






. Comment on this article via your Facebook, Yahoo, AOL, Hotmail login.

Share this article via these popular social media networks
del.icio.usdel.icio.us DiggDigg RedditReddit GoogleGoogle



AFRICA NEWS
Violence, drought spark 'human tragedy' in Somalia: UN
Geneva (AFP) July 5, 2011
Persistent violence compounded by a serious drought have forced 54,000 Somalis to flee in June, bringing the total number of displaced Somalis to a quarter of the country's population, the UNHCR said Tuesday. The food shortage problem is so acute that there are now reports of children under five dying of hunger and exhaustion while fleeing, or dying within a day of their arrival at refugee c ... read more


AFRICA NEWS
Apple fires back in patent war with Samsung

EU task force on raw materials sought

China accused of rushing bridge opening

Lockheed Martin Team Completes GeoEye-2 Design Phase Early

AFRICA NEWS
US Army Builds and Tests Future Network During NIE Exercise

Celebrating the 40th Anniversary of the Guardrail System

Russia launches Cosmos-series military satellite

Spain aims at military-civilian satellites

AFRICA NEWS
Space X Dragon Spacecraft Returns To Florida

Arianespace Launch Postponed At Least 20 Days

Minotaur Rocket Launch from NASA Wallops Re-Scheduled

Parallel Ariane 5 launch campaigns keep up Arianespace's 2011 mission pace

AFRICA NEWS
Astrium awarded Galileo Full Operational Capability Ground Control Segment Contract

House Committee Acts to Halt LightSquared Proposal Until GPS Interference Issues Resolved

US Supreme Court to hear warrantless GPS case

Study Shows Interference with GPS Poses Major Threat to U.S. Economy

AFRICA NEWS
DLR examines the benefits of sectorless airspace

Boeing Values India Market for 1320 New Airplanes at 150 Billion Dollars

Volcanic ash cloud grounds more flights in Argentina

DLR Airbus A320 ATRA taxis using fuel cell-powered nose wheel for the first time

AFRICA NEWS
Laser, electric fields combined for new 'lab-on-chip' technologies

Magnetic memory and logic could achieve ultimate energy efficiency

Change in material boosts prospects of ultrafast single-photon detector

Scientists Hope to Get Glimpse of Adolescent Universe from Revolutionary Instrument-on-a-Chip

AFRICA NEWS
NASA Flies Greenhouse Gas Mission Over Nevada Salt Flat

Pioneering ERS environment satellite retires

DLR scientists support expedition with a highly accurate 3D model of mountain

La Nina's Exit Leaves Climate Forecasts in Limbo

AFRICA NEWS
Mongolia herder on mission to tackle mining firms

Time to let science drive Great Lakes policy on Asian carp, experts say

Greenpeace ship Rainbow Warrior III debuts

Mass tourism threatening Venice lagoon: ecologists


Memory Foam Mattress Review
Newsletters :: SpaceDaily Express :: SpaceWar Express :: TerraDaily Express :: Energy Daily
XML Feeds :: Space News :: Earth News :: War News :: Solar Energy News
.

The content herein, unless otherwise known to be public domain, are Copyright 1995-2011 - Space Media Network. AFP and UPI Wire Stories are copyright Agence France-Presse and United Press International. ESA Portal Reports are copyright European Space Agency. All NASA sourced material is public domain. Additional copyrights may apply in whole or part to other bona fide parties. Advertising does not imply endorsement,agreement or approval of any opinions, statements or information provided by Space Media Network on any Web page published or hosted by Space Media Network. Privacy Statement