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Central African Republic: Struggling to Undo the Damage of Sexual Violence


UN Integrated Regional Information Networks
 

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UN Integrated Regional Information Networks

1 April 2008
Posted to the web 1 April 2008

Bossangoa

The Monam group of rape survivors in the northern town of Bossangoa in the Central African Republic (CAR) does what it can to keep going, but morale is low and money tight.

"We've been left to fend for ourselves. We get little help from outside. Many of our members have died," the group's chairwoman, Pelagie Ndokoyanga, told IRIN/PlusNews.

Monam, which means "common good" in the Sango language, was set up in 2006 to bring together female survivors of sexual violence committed in 2001 and 2002 amid the mayhem leading up to the most recent of CAR's numerous coups d'etat that brought Francois Bozize to power in March 2003.

As well as providing a forum for solidarity, revenue-generation and wellbeing for women who have suffered gender-based violence (GBV), Monam also aims to combat such abuse, identify its perpetrators and fight against the stigmatisation of women in general and rape survivors in particular. According to Ndokoyanga, several members of the group were abandoned by their husbands after they were raped.

Crying out to be heard

Marie Moudjougoto, a community activist who has helped organise hundreds of women into associations based on their home villages, professions or religious faith, used the occasion of a huge International Women's Day [8 March] parade in the northern town of Paoua to highlight how women have borne the brunt of violence in CAR and to promote the role women ought to play as the country begins to rebuild itself.

"What we want is security...let our cursed sisters who were raped, brutalised, traumatised and bereaved have peace of mind and the hope of being women, mothers, and grandmothers," said Moujougoto after some 1,500 women, grouped into their various associations, had paraded down the main street of Paoua.

Some carried printed placards or flags identifying their association, others simple blackboards with chalked inscriptions such as 'Karé Simbal Associaton for the Fight Against Poverty'.

Many of the women carried the fruits of their business - ground cereals, vegetables, even bricks - on their heads as they marched to the beat of three drummers.

"We want women with a capital 'W' to be heard, in the home, in the market place, in the office, even in the field in the churches and mosques...we want to live in peace with the hope of having brought, through this day, in the name of women, a hope for life, forgiveness and reconciliation," Moudjougoto added.

Many of those who took part, such as Bertille, a teacher, had walked for a whole day from their villages to attend the ceremony. "We came to show people we are suffering," she told IRIN/PlusNews.

Bertille recounted how one Sunday in January 2007, gunfire broke out in her village, located in rebel-controlled territory.

"The army arrived and set fire to 80 houses and burnt our groundnut fields as well as our seed stocks. They said we supported the rebels," she said.

"After that we stayed in the bush without shelter for three months. We survived on wild manioc. Even now it's not easy to find food," she added, explaining that insecurity and fear still prevents many women from going to their fields for fear of attack by bandits.

When an HIV testing and counselling centre was set up in Bossangoa in 2005, many of the first HIV-positive cases were the result of rape.

Among them is Nkokoyanga, who also works with the Bossangoa Association of People Living with HIV.

"It's normal to tell relatives when one is infected, it's not a sin," she said when several dozen members of the association met IRIN/PlusNews. "But they are the first to spread the news."

"Nobody has a job here. I have all my certificates but I never get a job because people know I am HIV-positive," she added.

Both organisations would like to enhance their incoming-generating activities such as market trading, but lack of the necessary capital makes it hard to get such projects off the ground.

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With UNAIDS estimating CAR's HIV prevalence at 10 percent, with just three percent of HIV-positive adults on life-prolonging antiretroviral therapy, there is a clear and urgent need to scale up HIV education, testing and treatment, but continued armed conflict and insecurity have made this difficult in many areas of the country.

Many rapes, little data

Accurate, detailed statistics about the number of women who suffer GBV in CAR are unavailable. This is partly because of the stigma attached to such attacks, but also because the government barely functions outside the capital and international humanitarian actors have only recently begun working in the country in significant numbers.

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