Daily Trust Saturday

Raped for food: Inside story of Benue sexual violence victims

I was raped in farm – 20-year-old IDP ‘Most cases not reported for fear of stigima’ We provided care to 294 victims – MSF

- Hope Abah Emmanuel, Makurdi PHOTOS: Hope Abah Emmanuel

Explaining why the women fall prey, he said most of the victims had been taken away from their means of livelihood, such that when they become hungry they often have no choice but to return to their farms where they may have some food to be harvested

Babara Kim, a 20-year-old victim of rape, carries a three-month-old pregnancy. Her village in Guma Local Government Area of Benue State was sacked by suspected armed men last year. A few months ago, she was at the farm to harvest cassava when two young men accosted and raped her.

Babara, who lives with her grandmothe­r at an Internally Displaced Persons (IDP) camp, said she returned to the farm because there was nothing for them to eat.

“Two boys raped me in the farm in March this year when I went to harvest cassava. I cried and returned to the camp but didn’t do anything about it.

“I didn’t report the matter or tell anyone because I didn’t know who to report to. I didn’t take any treatment either because I wasn’t aware of what to do. I am now three months pregnant as a result of the incident,” she narrated.

Babara’s story is one of the numerous rape accounts of women in Benue State, who have been chased out of their villages and are now left to fend for themselves and their families in IDP camps.

In a state where armed conflicts, occasioned by communal clashes and invasion by bandits have driven thousands out of their ancestral homes to now live in government designated camps, the women who attempt to return to their farms are

often targets of sexual assault. However, our correspond­ent gathered that most of these female victims often suffer sexual violence in silence due to the stigma associated with it.

On June 19 every year the world marks the Internatio­nal Day for the Eliminatio­n of Sexual Violence in Conflict to remember victims of the increasing cases of sexual violence. The United Nations (UN) has defined the term “conflict-related sexual violence” as rape, sexual slavery, forced prostituti­on, forced pregnancy, forced abortion, enforced sterilisat­ion, forced marriage and any other form of sexual violence of comparable gravity perpetrate­d against women, men, girls or boys, directly or indirectly linked to a conflict.”

According to the UN, the term also encompasse­s traffickin­g in persons when committed in situations of conflict for the purpose of sexual violence or exploitati­on.

Practition­ers in the field estimate that for each rape reported in connection with a conflict, 10 to 20 cases go undocument­ed.

The UN resolved that victims of traffickin­g and sexual violence committed by terrorist groups should be eligible for official redress.

Many victims of rape in Benue State narrate how they were often sexually assaulted, usually at gunpoint, during the invasion of their villages or while they went in search of food at their farms earlier abandoned.

Sandy Dodo, who said she was yet to fully recover from a horrendous experience in the hands of three men who sexually violated her in May, explained that the incident occurred after she went in search of food and was returning to the camp.

Sandy, 24, who now lives in a displaced persons camp with her four children, said that prior to that horrific experience, she had earlier been raped last year when armed men sacked their village. She added that her husband later absconded as life became tough for the family at the camp.

“Sometime last month, my children and I hadn’t eaten for days because there was no food in the camp and my husband had abandoned us, so I went out looking for food, but on my way back, three young men held me down and raped me.

“Two of the men held me down while the third raped me. They wanted to take turns but they heard footsteps and ran away. When I returned to the camp, I told my neighbour, who took me to the clinic for medical attention,” she narrated.

Like Babara, Sandy did not report the matter to the police. She said, “I am physically fine now but still have palpitatio­n as a result of the experience.”

Another female victim said women were often raped whenever hunger became unbearable at the IDP camps and they attempted to return to their farms in deserted villages to harvest crops. She, however, said there were cases where indigenes engaged in sexual assaults as those who violated her spoke in a known language.

“I don’t know them, so I decided to suffer my shame in silence instead of reporting it and people will begin to make mockery of me,” she said.

Buttressin­g the stories of the victims, a camp official who craved anonymity, admitted that there had been increased cases of rape by men in host communitie­s, as well as the IDP camps.

A health worker in one of the IDPs camps in Guma Local Government Area who spoke to our correspond­ent on the condition of anonymity disclosed that the camp had over 50 rape cases, adding that majority of the perpetrato­rs were bandits.

“Sometimes these women go to the farms and they are attacked and raped. The attackers will always kill the men, even if they are two months old, then rape the woman, beat her and let her go, regardless of whether she gets pregnant or not. We have cases of many pregnant women who were raped and beaten,” he said.

Explaining why the women fall prey, he said most of the victims had been taken away from their means of livelihood, such that when they become hungry they often have no choice but to return to their farms where they may have some food to be harvested. Sometimes they are lucky and would not meet the attackers, but in most cases they are unfortunat­e to meet them.

“When these rape cases occur, we have community focal persons who confidenti­ally refer them to us. We provide transporta­tion for them to come, even if they are far away. When they arrive, we first of test them for HIV, sexually transmitte­d infections, then ensure that they don’t get pregnant against their will because of the rape.

“After that, we provide psychologi­cal support care, which involves counsellin­g. There are cases where the women are brought to us without clothes, so we provide them with clothes. We provide other items they will need, like toothbrush­es, sanitary

 ?? ?? Women in one of the IDPs camps in Benue State
Women in one of the IDPs camps in Benue State

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