National Post

DENIS MUKWEGE

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Dr. Mukwege was in surgery — his second operation of the day — at the hospital that he founded in 1999 in Congo’s eastern Bukavu region when the announceme­nt came Friday that he had won the prestigiou­s prize. He learned of it because he heard colleagues and patients crying at the news.

After the announceme­nt, mobile phone footage showed a smiling Mukwege jostled by dancing, ululating medical colleagues in scrubs in the hospital’s courtyard.

The 63-year-old gynecologi­cal surgeon said for nearly 20 years he has witnessed war crimes “against women, teenage girls, small girls, babies.”

“Dear survivors around the world, I want to tell you that through this prize the world is listening to you and refuses indifferen­ce,” he said. “We hope that the world will no longer delay taking action in your favour, with force and determinat­ion, because the survival of humanity depends on you. It’s you women who carry humanity.”

Mukwege is the son of a preacher who travelled around eastern Congo — often called the rape capital of the world — in the years before war convulsed the region, taking millions of lives. But even before the wars, health care at the time was grim. Horrified by the amount of childbirth complicati­ons his father’s parishione­rs asked him to pray over, Mukwege became determined to enter the medical field, eventually travelling to France to specialize in gynecology.

He founded Panzi Hospital in 1999, just as eastern Congo was overtaken by a new wave of violence that became infamous for its brutality, particular­ly toward women. Militias from Congo, Rwanda and Uganda tore across eastern Congo for the better part of a decade, raping and pillaging.

Panzi Hospital was where tens of thousands of rape victims went for treatment, some showing up naked, others having already been to the hospital after previous rapes. Mukwege treated countless victims, often working 18-hour days. He only stopped for a period of two and a half months after he narrowly survived an assassinat­ion attempt and sought refuge in France.

Mukwege has been a staunch critic of Congo’s government, which he has called out for impunity and human rights abuses.

“We are thrilled to see our dear friend and partner honoured for his fearless work helping tens of thousands of Congolese girls and women who have been abused during the conflict in their country,” said Donna McKay, the executive director of Physicians for Human Rights, an advocacy group that works in Panzi Hospital. “Dr. Mukwege is not only an extraordin­ary physician, but a courageous human rights leader who perfectly embodies the critical role that medical profession­als play in witnessing abuse and speaking out against injustice.”

“Dr. Mukwege brings smiles and helps repair women from the barbaric acts of men in Congo,” said Solange Furaha Lwashiga, a Congolese women’s activist.

“This particular type of war crime has been more invisible, because the victims have such a stigma and no one is willing to speak up on their behalf,” said Reiss-Andersen.

“The importance of Dr. Mukwege’s enduring, dedicated and selfless efforts in this field cannot be overstated. He has repeatedly condemned impunity for mass rape and criticized the Congolese government and other countries for not doing enough to stop the use of sexual violence against women as a strategy and weapon of war,” the Nobel committee said.

ENDURING, DEDICATED AND SELFLESS EFFORTS.

 ?? JOEL SAGET / AFP / GETTY IMAGES ??
JOEL SAGET / AFP / GETTY IMAGES

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