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The War against Women: A Dispatch from the West African Front
by Ann Jones
Kailahun, Sierra Leone - Greetings from a war zone that's not Iraq. And not Afghanistan either.
I'm checking in from West Africa, where I've been working with women in three neighboring countries, all recently torn apart by civil wars: Liberia, Sierra Leone, and Côte d'Ivoire.
The Iraq debacle has monopolized attention and obscured these "lesser" wars -- now officially "over" -- but millions of West African women are struggling to recover. For them, the war isn't really over at all, not by a long shot. This is the war story that's never truly told. Let me explain.
Tomgram: Ann Jones, The War against Women Never Ends
In
recent months, Tomdispatch writers have been on the global road. David
Morse returned to the embattled Southern Sudan, accompanying three
"lost boys" from a bitter, forgotten civil war; Rebecca Solnit went to
the impoverished state of Chiapas, Mexico to meet with the women of the
Zapatista rebel movement ("Revolution of the Snails"); and Nick Turse
voyaged to Vietnam's Mekong Delta to encounter two victims of a past
American War ("Two Men, Two Legs, and Too Much Suffering"), who, thanks
largely to the response of American Vietnam veterans, will now receive
new artificial legs.
Today, Ann Jones, who, in the wake of the
9/11 attacks, spent several years as a humanitarian aid worker in
Afghanistan focusing on the lives of women and wrote a moving book,
Kabul in Winter, about her experience, takes us to West Africa and into
the chilling nightmare of women's lives in war-torn lands. This is the
first of a series of reports she will be writing for Tomdispatch in the
coming months. Tom
The War against Women:
A Dispatch from the West African Front
by Ann Jones
Greetings from a war zone that's not Iraq. And not Afghanistan either.
I'm
checking in from West Africa, where I've been working with women in
three neighboring countries, all recently torn apart by civil wars:
Liberia, Sierra Leone, and Côte d'Ivoire. The Iraq debacle has
monopolized attention and obscured these "lesser" wars -- now
officially "over" -- but millions of West African women are struggling
to recover. For them, the war isn't really over at all, not by a long
shot. This is the war story that's never truly told. Let me explain.
Surely
you remember these conflicts. Liberia's war came in three successive
waves lasting 14 years altogether, from 1989 to 2003. Sierra Leone's
war started in 1991 when guerillas of the Revolutionary United Front
(RUF) of Sierra Leone, trained in Liberia, invaded their own country.
The war drew many players and lasted until January 2002, a decade in
all. In Côte d'Ivoire, a civil war started in 2002 when northern rebels
attempted a coup to oust President Laurent Gbagbo, but by that time the
international community had decided to act to prevent any further
destabilization of the region. French, African, and later UN
peacekeepers stepped in and a treaty was signed in 2003.
So,
officially, these countries are no longer "war zones." Accords have
been signed. Peacekeeping forces are on duty or close at hand. The UN
and international aid agencies are assisting "recovery." Some arms have
been surrendered; some refugees have returned from exile. Some men are
making mud bricks and building huts to replace the spacious houses of
embossed concrete and tile that once graced towns and villages
throughout the region. Officially, Liberia, Sierra Leone, and Côte
d'Ivoire are now designated "post-conflict zones," but they are so
fractured, so traumatized, and -- especially in the cases of Liberia
and Sierra Leone -- so devastated and impoverished that they cannot be
said to be securely at peace either. Sierra Leone has replaced
Afghanistan as the poorest country on the planet and, like Afghanistan,
it is a nation of widows.
Visit one of these countries and
you'll see for yourself that, at best, real peace will take a long,
slow time to come. The destruction in Sierra Leone's Kailahun District,
for instance, is as shocking as anything I ever saw in the devastated
Afghan capital, Kabul. UN officials and an array of international aid
organizations like to use the term "post-conflict" for such places in
such moments. It sounds vaguely hopeful, even if it designates a
desperate place embarked on a difficult period of "recovery" that may
or may not be recognizable after a decade or two, or even a generation
or two, as peace.
That's what our leaders don't bother to
mention (possibly don't even grasp) when they talk blithely about war
and peace as if they were simply opposite sides of the same coin,
attained with equal ease with a heads-or-tails flip. Any fool can start
a war swiftly with a shock and awe assault -- as George Bush did from
the air in Iraq or the RUF did on the ground in Sierra Leone -- but
peace is no sudden acquisition.
Just last month, the Special
Court for Sierra Leone in The Hague resumed proceedings begun last June
against Charles Taylor, the charming American-educated sociopath and
former president of Liberia. Taylor faces 11 charges for war crimes
related to matters including terrorizing civilians, murder, rape,
sexual slavery, amputations, and enslavement. These atrocities were
committed not against his own country but against his neighbor. It was
Taylor who backed RUF rebels as they terrorized the populace and
augmented their numbers by abducting civilians.
Both Taylor
and RUF leader Foday Sankoh reportedly received tactical training in
Libya from Muammar Gaddafi, who aimed to disrupt the West African
region. Yet these wars were largely not about ideology or even
politics. They were about greed, about the power to control and exploit
the natural resources of the region -- Liberia's primal rain forests
and especially Sierra Leone's "blood diamonds." Political scientists
and military historians may eventually advance other theories to
explain these wars -- though they'll be hard pressed to find any
redeeming features, any "just cause" -- but West Africans will tell you
that they took place simply because a few "bad, bad men" craved power
and wealth. When Foday Sankoh's RUF forces invaded Sierra Leone, they
numbered no more than 150 men, but what they started laid waste to a
promising country.
Here's what I want to remind you of,
though: When you think about these men who start wars, remember what
they've done not to soldiers on either side, but to civilian
populations -- especially to women. Today, it is civilians who are by
far the most numerous casualties of war. Each successive conflict of
recent times has recorded a greater proportion of civilians displaced,
exiled, assaulted, tortured, wounded, maimed, killed, or disappeared.
In every modern war, most of the suffering civilians are women and
children.
In many wars, maimed and dead civilians are counted
(if at all) merely as "collateral damage" -- like the estimated 3,000
innocent citizens who died in the initial American bombing of
Afghanistan in 2001. In the West African wars, civilians became the
designated targets. Foday Sankoh intended to conquer Sierra Leone, but
having only 150 fighters, he resorted to forcible recruitment. Like
Charles Taylor's forces in Liberia, Sankoh's destroyed whole villages,
murdering most of the residents and taking away only those who might
serve them as soldiers, porters, cooks, or "wives." Again, many of the
dead and most of the abducted were women and children.
And
here's a little-known reality: When any conflict of this sort
officially ends, violence against women continues and often actually
grows worse. Not surprisingly, murderous aggression cannot be turned
off overnight. When men stop attacking one another, women continue to
be convenient targets. Here in West Africa, as in so many other places
where rape was used as a weapon of war, it has become a habit carried
seamlessly into the "post-conflict" era. Where normal structures of law
enforcement and justice have been disabled by war, male soldiers and
civilians alike can prey upon women and children with impunity. And
they do.
So I'm writing to you, here in "post-conflict" West
Africa, from an active war zone. I'm writing from the heart of the war
against women and children.
Counting Casualties
Listen
to this report from Amnesty International. It describes the least of
the West African wars, the relatively short civil war in Côte d'Ivoire:
"The scale of rape and sexual violence in Côte d'Ivoire in
the course of the armed conflict has been largely underestimated. Many
women have been gang-raped or have been abducted and reduced to sexual
slavery by fighters. Rape has often been accompanied by the beating or
torture (including torture of a sexual nature) of the victim
All armed
factions have perpetrated and continue to perpetrate sexual violence
with impunity."
Human Rights Watch points out that "cases of
sexual abuse may be significantly underreported," because women fear
"the possibility of reprisals by perpetrators
ostracism by families
and communities, and cultural taboos."
The Amnesty report
documents case after case of girls and women, aged "under 12" to 63,
assaulted by armed men. The more recent and thoroughgoing report by
Human Rights Watch records the rape of children as young as three
years-old. During the civil war, women and girls were seized in their
village homes or at military roadblocks, or were discovered hiding in
the bush. Some were raped in public. Some were raped in front of their
husbands and children. Some were forced to witness the murder of
husbands or parents. Then they were taken away to soldiers' camps to be
held along with many other women. They were forced to cook for the
soldiers during the day and every night they were gang-raped, in some
cases by 30 to 40 men. They were also beaten and tortured. They saw
women who resisted being beaten or killed by a simple slicing of the
throat.
Many women were raped so incessantly and so brutally
-- with sticks, knives, gun barrels, burning coals -- that they died.
Many others were left with injuries and pain that still linger long
after the war. Many who had been scarred as girls by "excision" or FMG
(female genital mutilation) were literally ripped apart.
The
Amnesty report coolly says: "The brutality of rape frequently causes
serious physical injuries that require long-term and complex treatment
including uterine prolapses (the descent of the uterus into the vagina
or beyond)" -- one has to wonder what lies "beyond" the vagina --
"vesico-vaginal or recto-vaginal fistulas and other injuries to the
reproductive system or rectum, often accompanied by internal and
external bleeding or discharge." It notes that such women usually can't
"access the medical care they need." Some still find it hard to sit
down, or stand up, or walk. Some still spit up blood. Some have lost
their eyesight or their memories. Some miscarried. Many contracted
sexually transmitted diseases and HIV. No one knows how many of them
died, or are dying, as a result.
And many are still missing,
perhaps dragged across borders when rogue militias from a neighboring
country went home. Perhaps slaughtered along the way.
War and Its Sequel
Historically,
women have long been counted among "the spoils of war," free for the
taking; but, in our own time, women in large numbers have also been
pawns in deliberate military and political strategies intended to
humiliate the men to whom they "belong" and to exterminate their ethnic
groups. (Think of Bosnia.) The Amnesty report traces the wholesale
violence against women in Côte d'Ivoire to December 2000 when a number
of women were arrested, raped, and tortured at the government's Police
Training School in Dioula -- because their presumed ethnicity and
political affiliation allied them with the opposition. According to
Human Rights Watch, this was but one of many such cases incited by
government-sponsored propaganda before the civil war even began.
No man responsible for any of these crimes has ever been brought to justice.
Next
door in Liberia, by the time fighting ended in 2002, 1.4 million
Liberians had been displaced within the country. Almost a million
others had fled. In a country of three million people, that's one in
three citizens gone. At least 270,000 people died. That's nearly 10% of
the population. And here again the easy targets were women. A World
Health Organization study in 2005 estimated that a staggering 90% of
Liberian women had suffered physical or sexual violence; three out of
four had been raped.
Typically, ending the war did not end the
violence against women. A study in preparation by the International
Rescue Committee -- the organization for which I currently work as a
volunteer -- and Columbia University's School of Public Health
concludes, "While the war officially ended in 2003, the war on women
continued."
Well over half the women interviewed in two
Liberian counties, including the capital city, Monrovia, had survived
at least one violent physical attack during an 18- month period in
2006-2007, years after the conflict had officially ended. Well over
half the women reported at least one violent sexual assault in the same
period. Seventy-two percent said their husbands had forced them to have
sex against their will. A 2003 IRC study among Liberian refugees in
Sierra Leone found that 75% of the women had been sexually violated
before they fled their country; after they fled, 55% were sexually
assaulted again.
For women, war is not over when it's over.
Women Like Me
Countless women will never recover from the assaults they suffered during the war. I met many such women in Liberia.
On
a visit I made to Kolahun, in Lofa County, where fighting had been
heavy, one showed me her scars: a series of parallel horizontal ridges
starting just below one ear and moving toward the throat. Some guerilla
in Charles Taylor's army had locked this whisper of a woman against his
chest and slowly, inch by inch, laid open the flesh of her neck in
ribbons of blood. But that wasn't all. Taylor's men had broken all the
fingers of her left hand so that they now point backwards at seemingly
impossible angles. They slammed her back so forcefully with rifle butts
that one leg and one arm (the one with the useless hand) are now
paralyzed. She can still walk, leaning on a homemade wooden crutch; but
that leaves her without a good arm, and she can't carry anything on her
head, having lost the ability to balance. She has five children, some
of them fathered by rape. The soldiers held her a long time. How many
raped her she cannot say.
In the tiny village of Dougoumai I
met a woman people refer to only as "the sick lady." She lay on a bed
in a one-room mud-brick house. As I came in, she managed to sit up with
great difficulty, using her twisted hands to move her swollen, useless
legs. Her sister says she was captured by a militia fighting against
Charles Taylor and gang-raped repeatedly by ten men. Nobody can say how
long they kept her. They rammed their gun butts into her back --
evidently a common technique -- paralyzing her legs. She cannot walk.
They smashed her hands. She cannot hold anything or feed herself or
comb her hair. Her mother and two sisters, who luckily survived the
war, feed her by hand, their lives too now dominated by the
consequences of the violence done to this woman.
Recently the
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) and the UN Fund for
Population Activities (UNFPA) surveyed surviving women in Lofa County,
the center of Charles Taylor's operations. More than 98% said that,
during his war (1999-2003), they lost their homes; more than 90%, their
livelihoods; more than 72%, at least one family member. Nearly 90% of
them survived at least one violent physical assault; more than half, at
least one violent sexual assault. No one inquired about the number of
women now caring for the permanently disabled.
In Sierra
Leone, where terrorizing the civilian population was the main tactic of
war, the violence against women and children was, as Human Rights Watch
has reported, even more brutal. All parties to the conflict committed
countless atrocities. Official reports document appalling crimes:
fathers forced to rape their own daughters; brothers forced to rape
their sisters; boy soldiers gang-raping old women, then chopping off
their arms; pregnant women eviscerated alive and the living fetus
snatched from the womb to satisfy soldiers betting on its sex. A
brother is hacked to death and eviscerated; his heart and liver are
placed in the hands of his 18-year-old sister who is commanded to eat
them. She refuses. She is taken to a place where other women are being
held. Among them is her sister. She sees her sister and other women
murdered. Their heads are placed in her lap. These crimes, which
violate primal taboos, aim to destroy not just individual victims but a
whole culture as well; yet the individual victims are important in
their own right, and in most cases they are women and children.
Perhaps
the worst crime of the bad, bad men has been turning children -- mostly
boys -- into armed guerillas as bad as themselves. In his bestselling
autobiography A Long Way Gone, Ishmael Beah vividly describes his life
as a boy soldier. Separated from his family by the war, he was captured
by soldiers in the army of Sierra Leone, trained to fight, kept high on
drugs (as all soldiers were), and forced to kill. When boy soldiers
begin to rape and murder girls and women willingly at the instigation
of men, civilization has collapsed.
Crimes Against Women
In
recent years, every kind of horror has been inflicted on girls and
women in Liberia, Sierra Leone, and Côte d'Ivoire because they are
female. If females were a particular ethnic group -- Albanians, let's
say, or Tutsis -- or if they espoused a particular religion, as did
Bosnian Muslims, we could recognize what goes on as a kind of "gender
cleansing" or mass femicide. But we don't speak of crimes against women
in that way. When did you last hear someone speak of "crimes against
women" at all?
Interviewed for a TV documentary on mass rape
in the Democratic Republic of Congo, a smiling guerrilla says he's
"made love" to many women. The interviewer asks if all the women were
willing, and he laughs. He admits that many fight him, and he says --
still grinning -- "If they are strong, I call my friends to help me."
Despite his use of euphemisms, he knows just what he's doing. When the
interviewer labels his love-making "rape," he typically insists that
rape happens in wartime and that when the war is over, he won't do it
anymore. The state of war excuses men's crimes against women because
rape -- so the claim goes -- is something that just naturally occurs in
war.
The war against women in West Africa and elsewhere is
different from other wars -- whether driven by ideology, politics,
greed, or personal ambition -- in that every faction, every side, makes
war on women. They all abduct and rape and force women to labor. They
all murder women. In West Africa, only the Civil Defense Forces (CDF)
in Sierra Leone refrained for a considerable time from rape. They were
traditional hunters, recruited by the government to defend their own
areas from the rebels. Their customs kept them from sexual intercourse,
believed to deplete a warrior's power, and they operated close to home,
where they were known; but, as the war went on, they, too, began to act
like all the other fighters. Their initial restraint was important,
however, offering evidence that rape does not have to be something that
"just happens" in war, but is instead an elective, wildly popular
choice.
After war, in the "post-conflict" era, even some
international peacekeepers have joined the war against women. Human
Rights Watch and others have documented cases of rape by peacekeeping
soldiers in West Africa, but none have been prosecuted. Perpetrators
are simply repatriated or moved to a new post. Human Rights Watch also
reports on the widespread practice among peacekeepers of using children
who have turned to prostitution to survive. (There are few other
options for girls who have been orphaned or rejected by their families,
and many of these child prostitutes had already been used as sex slaves
during wartime.) But apparently the peacekeepers recruit many girls
themselves.
Here in Kailahun District, the place where the
Sierra Leone war started and ended, women are upset and angry about the
sexual exploitation of their adolescent daughters. Parents in this part
of the country -- many of them war widows -- take seriously the advice
to send their daughters to school, which costs more than most can
easily afford. If a girl student becomes pregnant, she is required by
law to drop out. (Consider the impact on a small village struggling to
recover from war of the loss of even a few prospective teachers,
nurses, or social workers.) If the father of the expected child is a
fellow student, he can continue his studies, denying all
responsibility. Often, however, it's not the boys who are to blame.
Many still-virginal girls drop out of school early to escape predatory
teachers, and women report that the incidence of teen pregnancy drops
when peacekeeping forces leave town.
Even then, however, rape
and child rape continue, largely unabated. It's hard to tell with
certainty just how high this is, because raped women and girls are
normally too shamed by the crime to report it. In war time, it was
somewhat easier because they had so clearly been forced by armed men;
with the war "over," rape once again becomes a woman's own fault.
Nonetheless, angry parents in this region of Sierra Leone, increasingly
report child rape to authorities. Here in Kailahun District, women
mobilized to force the local magistrate to hear the case of a
7-year-old rape victim. The magistrate, apparently related to the
admitted perpetrator, had prevented prosecution by postponing his
trial, again and again.
Domestic violence -- wife-beating,
marital rape, emotional abuse, torture, economic deprivation, and the
like -- is common. Impoverished women with many children to feed have
no choice but to endure "normal" levels of violence. But as in wartime,
habitual violence invites the thrill of excess. Just the other day, a
man in Moyamba District killed his wife and cut off her head.
Bad Men Make Good
For
bad, bad men, terrorizing civilians holds advantages -- beyond the
immediate gratification of the rush of power. Such acts can land them
important posts in government. When atrocities become sufficiently
conspicuous and horrific -- such as the notorious amputations of arms
and legs in Sierra Leone -- the international community steps in to
initiate a peace process. Usually they bring to the negotiating table
all the bad, bad men who have been causing so much trouble and buy them
off with positions of power in a new "interim" or "transitional"
government. Witness, in another part of the world where women are
notoriously badly treated, all those well-known warlords the Afghan
people wanted tried for war crimes who somehow wound up in President
Hamid Karzai's cabinet, or -- after elections advertised as democratic
-- in parliament.
Foday Sankoh had been condemned to death for
treason when he was summoned to just such peace negotiations. From
them, he emerged as the head of the government commission in charge of
managing Sierra Leone's natural resources, including the diamonds that
financed his war. Charles Taylor, while committing mayhem and rape in
refugee camps for displaced persons, was elected president of Liberia.
Voters seemed to figure, as battered women often do, that the best way
to stop the man's violence was to let him have his way, though this is
a path to certain disaster.
Bad, bad men are quick to learn
from the rapid advancement of their brothers elsewhere. Laurent Kunda
in the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC), widely recognized as a prime
candidate for trial before a war crimes tribunal, is now said to be
jockeying for a high position in the government of the DRC in exchange
for laying down his arms. The current rapid descent of Kenya into
"tribal warfare" owes much to the same theory. Raila Odingo, having
lost a clearly suspect presidential election, exploits genocidal
violence with good reason to hope that international intervention will
usher him into office by the back door.
Although UN Security
Council Resolution 1325 calls for women to be included in all peace
processes, they are rarely invited to the table. With men in charge of
governments almost everywhere, the fearful fascination with bad, bad
men continues and the perverse preference for predators trickles down.
In Sierra Leone, ex-combatants were rewarded with motorcycles. The
theory was that violent young men would be less dangerous if they could
serve a useful purpose and make some money carrying passengers on brand
new highly-chromed bikes in a country where most cars had been torched.
The result? Every public square in the dodgiest districts of Sierra
Leone is now dominated by a motorcycle gang consisting mainly of young
men already surely skilled in the sexual exploitation of girls. Perhaps
in the end, the transport scheme will work out; but in Sierra Leone
most women and girls still walk.
Here in Kailahun District,
women tell the story -- possibly apocryphal -- of an old woman who was
huddled over her cook fire when RUF rebels entered her village. She was
frying some tasty frogs. Rebels surrounded her, peering into the pot to
see what she was cooking, and one of them said: "We are freedom
fighters of the Revolutionary United Front. We have come to save you
from the government." The old woman -- unafraid -- replied: "Then you
must go to the capital. The government is not in my pot." Women in
Kailahun District tell that story over and over, and they laugh every
time. They are so proud of that lone, bold, old woman who told those
rebel men off. That's the spirit of survival, still alive in them,
though they must know that the rebels probably shot the woman and ate
her frogs.
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