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Congo Rape Rate Equal To 48 Women Attacked Every Hour: Study

Congo Rape

RUKMINI CALLIMACHI   05/11/11 10:09 PM ET   AP

DAKAR, Senegal — The African nation of Congo has been called the worst place on earth to be a woman. A new study released Wednesday shows that it's even worse than previously thought: 1,152 women are raped every day, a rate equal to 48 per hour.

That rate is 26 times more than the previous estimate of 16,000 rapes reported in one year by the United Nations.

Michelle Hindin, an associate professor at Johns Hopkins' Bloomberg School of Public Health who specializes in gender-based violence, said the rate could be even higher. The source of the data, she noted, is a survey that was conducted through face-to-face interviews, and people are not always forthcoming about the violence they have suffered when talking to strangers.

"The numbers are astounding," she said.

Congo, a nation of 70 million people that is equal in size to Western Europe, has been plagued by decades of war. Its vast forests are rife with militias that have systematically used rape to destroy communities.

The analysis, which will be published in the American Journal of Public Health in June, shows that more than 400,000 women had been raped in Congo during a 12-month period between 2006 and 2007.

On average 29 Congolese women out of every 1,000 had been raped nationwide. That means that even in the parts of Congo that are not affected by the war, a woman is 58 times more likely to be raped than a woman in the United States, where the annual rate is 0.5 per 1,000 women.

Previous estimates of the number of rapes were derived from police and health center reports in the nation's troubled east where the conflict is concentrated. The authors of the study used figures from a government health survey and pooled data from across the country.

The highest frequency of rape was found in North Kivu, the province most affected by the conflict, where 67 women per 1,000 had been raped at least once.

"The message is important and clear: Rape in (Congo) has metastasized amid a climate of impunity, and has emerged as one of the great human crises of our time," said Michael VanRooyen, the director of the Harvard Humanitarian Initiative.

Margot Wallstrom, the U.N. special representative for sexual violence in conflict, welcomed the study.

"Conflict-related sexual violence is one of the major obstacles to peace in the DRC," she said in statement, using the initials for Congo. "Unchecked it could disrupt the entire social fabric of the country."

Wallstrom said the figures in the study are higher than the U.N.'s because it covers all sexual violence – including domestic and intimate partner violence – not just from military actors.

U.N. figures tend to be conservative because they must be verified by the organization itself, she said.

Wallstrom said she consistently stresses that "the number of reported violations are just the tip of the iceberg of actual incidents."

__

Associated Press Writers Saleh Mwanamilongo in Kinshasa, Congo, Edith Lederer in New York and Mike Stobbe in Atlanta contributed to this report.

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DAKAR, Senegal — The African nation of Congo has been called the worst place on earth to be a woman. A new study released Wednesday shows that it's even worse than previously thought: 1,152 wome...
DAKAR, Senegal — The African nation of Congo has been called the worst place on earth to be a woman. A new study released Wednesday shows that it's even worse than previously thought: 1,152 wome...
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
GlobalGramma
03:59 AM on 05/16/2011
Want to make a difference in the real world for Congo?

Join the Virtual March on Washington this wk on a new Facebook page: Special Envoy Now. (www.facebo­ok.com/pag­es/Special­-Envoy-Now­/109321615­823077)

This is a critical month for Congo:
- a study finding 400,000 rapes in 1yr alone, almost 2 million in the course of the conflict.
- 35 Congressio­nal Representa­tives & 16 Senators wrote to Pres. Obama asking for appointmen­t of an African Great Lakes Special Envoy.
- 77 NGO's sent a letter to Sec. Clinton presenting a comprehens­ive approach for an internatio­nally cohesive Congo Plan (their first request: a Special Envoy, Now!

- Add your voice to the cry for Congo and a Special Envoy. Participat­e in the Virtual March:

1) make 5 signs requesting a Special Envoy NOW. Post them on the Facebook page;
2) request that your friends do the same, and that they share it with 5 of their friends. (PASS IT ON.)

Why a special envoy? Regional issues are involved and entrenched­. We need a boots-on-t­he-ground expert who can hone strategies that work. For more informatio­n, read the ltr to Secretary Clinton: http://bit­.ly/k5dNl8

Author Lisa Shannon (A Thousand Sisters) of Portland OR is fasting for 7 days this week to let people know that THIS IS THE MOMENT THIS YEAR FOR CONGO -- what you do will never be more effective. See her facebook video on why she's doing this hunger strike: www.facebook.com/video/video.php?v=2050965321760&comments
03:03 PM on 05/13/2011
The people (us, uk, europe, congo.. africa) really want this atrocities to end, the problem is governments.
billion $$$ donated each year, donors know that their money is not well spent but keep on giving to these countries governments.
the benefits taken out of these atrocities by international gov through multinationals biz is huge, no wonder some presidents have shares in big biz.
NGOs, big telephone and computer companies, international news makers, systems governing the world.. the congo people are to be suffering for ever, unless/until they alone take things in hands, weakest link, that how it works.
most comments are from people who express their human feelings, international governments system do not have hearts.
10:12 PM on 05/12/2011
With 80 to 90 percent of all Egyptian women having had a clitoridectomy for Allah, according to the United Nations, Egypt may well run neck and neck with the Congo for women's rights, but the Congo should take the forefront for its abuse of Pygmies, with rape and cannibalism particularly of Pygmy children being endemic.
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Stilyagi
Making a board with a bigger nail in it.
04:48 PM on 05/12/2011
Forget about arming the Libyans. Arm the women of the Congo. That'll put a stop to it real fast.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
mombabytiger
Looking into the heart of an artichoke.
02:24 PM on 05/12/2011
We give $1 billion to the Congo every year. We could start by stopping that unless human rights standards are met.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Rob O
There is no freedom without responsibility.
04:41 PM on 05/12/2011
You have to ask, why do we give so much to authoritarian regimes with great mineral wealth, and so few to struggling democracies in Africa just trying to keep the water clean and the schools open.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Chockolate
Four swirling square pegs in a round hole.
05:11 AM on 05/13/2011
All aid to Africa should stop. Aid is only of benefit in the very short term (after disasters etc.), then is gradually brings a country to its knees. Sure as hell all the aid we've given so far hasn't improved things one little bit.

How do you think a farmer feels when he takes his meagre crop into the market to sell only to see sacks of grain being passed out for free?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
ms.understood
pro-choice | liberal | womanist
12:49 PM on 05/12/2011
this should have no place in society!
12:44 PM on 05/12/2011
Reading stories like these helps further my point that we as a human race do not deserve this planet we live on.

End of Message.
10:14 PM on 05/12/2011
Speak for yerself
06:31 PM on 05/13/2011
I just did.
12:22 PM on 05/12/2011
I am amazed that some of the people posting here are actually perusing a news aggrigator rather than looking the TMZ or People magazine. Haven't they ever read a newspaper, book, or looked at the HuffPo, which has incidentally covered this issue before? Most of the Congo region lacks the rule of law, any kind of property rights, any "social contract" between its "citizens". The people are superstitious to an extreme and almost completely illiterate. The horrible Belgian colonists left an infrastructure.(electricity, roads, rail) that has been left to completely deteriorate by an overwhelmingingly ignorant (as in doesn't know any better) population. These people have a culture that essentially treated women as chattel BEFORE the European colonization of the 1800s, and that also celebrated a man's prowess as a warrior above almost all else, much like most Native American tribes. Basically, the natives have returned to their previous non-colonized state, except now they have AKMs instead of spears, and the patina of civilization brought by the Europeans has completely worn off.
For all of the folks posting on HP that somehow find a way to connect every evil in the world to corporations, here is an excellent place for you to move to. No Wal-Marts or McDonalds in the Congo. Our best response to the myriad crisises going on in this part of the world is to make believe that they are happening on another planet, because they might as well be.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Louise Aloft
no man is an island
12:59 PM on 05/12/2011
while i agree with almost everything that you wrote, didn't the we, the western world, step in to basically rob them of all those precious minerals they barely knew they had and certainly didn't have the knowledge or the resources to use themselves to, then, leave them with gaping debt to private entities (which may not be causal to the rapes but does exacerbate the desperate situation in general) or am i thinking of different african countries?
02:22 PM on 05/12/2011
If by "we" you mean the European powers that carved up Africa in the 19th Century...well I still have to say NO. I am sure that the mineral wealth that was extracted from central Africa was merely a crumb of what is there now. But without a working infrastucture, without a society that runs entirely and shamelessly on backsheesh (bribery) at every level, without an educated population, what difference does does some paper debt make? OK, all debt is forgiven and the "government" of some central African country gets a chunk of money from cobalt mining contracts. The people in the "government" are going to steal every blessed penny of that money for themselves anyway! Because there is no press, and no accountability, and no opposition political parties, and no economic competition, and none of the things that make Western Civ work so well, which it does when compared to a place where women are being raped with impunity at least 48 times an hour.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Rob O
There is no freedom without responsibility.
04:37 PM on 05/12/2011
How about a book like Adam Hochschild's King Leopold's Ghost or Howard French's A Continent for the Taking? Belgian rule in the Congo was absolutely brutal, and since independence the U.S. has been a primary backer of its authoritarian rulers (first Mobutu and then the Kabilas). We provided cover for the genocidal armies that have been doing so much of the raping and pillaging and that brought Kabila to power. Our interests have been clear: the extraction of mineral wealth for Western consumption at the cheapest price and the fewest entanglements. Congo minerals are in most of the hottest electronics on the market today.
08:01 AM on 05/13/2011
Rob O, According to your argument, a handful of CIA agents and businessmen completely manipulated a region of over 100 million people. Wow. Did they have super powers? You mention the Kabilas and Mobutu. I guess we should have backed some other tyrant kleptocrats with less cooler sounding names A lot of the "armies" you mention are led by religious maniacs and genocidaires from Rwanda. Yeah, the Belgians were "horrible" as I mentioned in my earlier post, so I guess by your logic we should be blaming the Brits (Normans? Saxons? Jutes? Celts?) for all of the problems in our country. A book for you to read is "Heart of Darkness" by Joseph Conrad. It is not only about what Kurtz does to the jungle, but also about what the jungle does to HIM.
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12:17 PM on 05/12/2011
Where is the UN?
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
mayorarce
02:53 PM on 05/12/2011
Congo's oil production is not that important for the U.S. to tell the U.N. to say or do something....
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Rob O
There is no freedom without responsibility.
04:39 PM on 05/12/2011
We don't want the UN messing with our interests in Central Africa. That's why there hasn't been a sniff about the Congo in the Security Council, despite a death toll that's the highest of any conflict since WWII.
CJ1
Love the Ignorant, hate the Ignorance
11:59 AM on 05/12/2011
Can we develop a synthetic bacteria deadly only to males yet passed thru sexual contact? Wipe em out, Moses-style.
10:16 PM on 05/12/2011
They tried that with Ebola 2 and in the Congo no less. (Hint: the medical journals documented WHO actiions to contained Ebola 2 and they are public domain)
CJ1
Love the Ignorant, hate the Ignorance
12:24 PM on 05/13/2011
Wow, no way. Why am I not surprised?
11:23 AM on 05/12/2011
I'm happy to see this article, because it's an alarmingly under-reported ongoing tragedy.
10:17 PM on 05/12/2011
How about the plight of the Pygmies in the Congo? Talk about under reported. And half of all Pygmies are women too.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Damien Black 1
Expat in China
11:17 AM on 05/12/2011
Some places are forever doomed.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Louise Aloft
no man is an island
11:31 AM on 05/12/2011
that sounds like an easy way to ignore the problem.. if it's forever doomed what can we do about it? i don't like that line of reasoning.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Damien Black 1
Expat in China
11:58 AM on 05/12/2011
You are right , it just feels like somethings won't change , I guess I should have faith and find a way to help.
03:15 PM on 05/13/2011
I also fight that thought everyday, being from #Congo
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
PrinceO
11:05 AM on 05/12/2011
holy crap!!
10:40 AM on 05/12/2011
If you're offended by what's going on in Congo, join A Thousand Sisters - it's a grassroots organization that's working to end violence against women in the Congo. http://athousandsisters.org/
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
NoraHuffposter
Liberal socialist
12:32 PM on 05/12/2011
Thank you for spreading the word. I've bookmarked your organization.
12:48 PM on 05/12/2011
Great! Thank you!
10:36 AM on 05/12/2011
Here is a small PORTION of a poem from "The New Verse News," online.

"A Woman's Language of War"

"Suddenly the sky turned blood-red. [ . . .]
I stood there, trembling with fright.
And I felt a loud, unending scream piercing nature."
--Edvard Munch (the Scream)

Year after year,
in sleeping positions of flowered poses,
we sleep with thorns of desert-dirt
between our fingers: bodies cursed silent.