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Field News

Ten women tell of their Angolan ordeal

December 13, 2007

Every year, tens of thousands of Congolese cross the border to work in the diamond-rich province of Lunda Norte, in Angola.

Since 2003, the Angolan army regularly has expelled some of this “illegal” population to the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC). This year, it is estimated that 44,000 people have already been deported to DRC.

Already denounced by MSF in 2004, these violent expulsions feature pervasive and systematic sexual violence against Congolese women perpetrated by some soldiers in the Angolan army.

Since October 2007, MSF teams present in Western Kasaï—a Congolese province bordering Angola—have collected 100 testimonies among expelled Congolese women. These women report abuse, detention, rapes and beatings by the Angolan military before being expelled to the other side of the border.

MSF: Medical and psychological support

In October 2007, alerted about the situation of the Congolese populations expelled from Angola, Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) teams in the DRC went to Western Kasai province to assess the needs.

In response to the overwhelmingly high number of women who had survived sexual violence, MSF set up a health center in Kamako, close to the Angolan border. Often initially consulting for lower abdominal pain or lower back pain, these women receive much-needed medical care as well as psychological support to help them cope with physical and psychological trauma resulting from the violence they have experienced.

At the same time, an MSF mobile medical team regularly travels along the border in order to identify people in need of medical assistance. In Kamako, MSF provides about 100 primary health care consultations a day for women and children, mainly for respiratory infections, dermatosis and malaria.

Testimonies

1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10

Testimony, Kamako

A 30 year-old woman, married with four children. She spent three months in Nzaji, Angola. She was expelled at the end of September 2007.

It was six o’clock in the morning. I was washing myself outside the house. My husband was away. Although I am married to an Angolan, I was not spared during the expulsions. Many soldiers arrived. They told me I had to leave. I did not even have time to get dressed properly. I was taken to Dundo, where I spent two days in a pit which had been converted into a prison.

There were 58 other people in Nzaji who had also been arrested. There were men, women and children. I was alone, as I had not come to Angola with my children. They stayed in Congo during the three months I spent in Angola.

In the prison, we were given nothing to eat or drink. The soldiers took the women out to rape them. I was raped eight times by two soldiers. They took me out of the prison and they raped me. It was dark and I do not know if it was the same soldiers or not. They said they would not beat me if I lay down. I had to let them take me. The soldiers were well dressed; they had a lot of cartridges. If I had not let them do it, they would have killed me. After raping me, they put me back in prison.

Afterwards they brought us by truck to the border. They told us: ‘Now you’re going home.’ We were 327 persons, divided between two trucks. There was no problem at the border.

Since I came back here to Congo, I do not feel at ease at all. I have pain in my lower abdomen, pain in my back. My body is itching. I’ve been able to find my children again. They are well. My brother, who was also expelled, has stayed in Kamako. I have told him about the conditions of my detention. He has not told me about his. I feel safe here. I suffered too much there. They treated us like animals. In the future, I need to find a way to live on here.

Tags: Angola, Democratic Republic of Congo, Sexual Violence

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