The Freeman

Hope at last for Croatia war rape victims

- Lajla Veselica Agence France Presse

More than two decades and therapy have done little to heal Ana Horvatinec's trauma of wartime rape by her neighbors in the Croatian town of Vukovar.

"There were six of them... I had to watch what they did to my daughter and she had to watch what they did to me," Horvatinec told AFP.

After years of neglect, Horvatinec and other victims of sexual violence committed during Croatia's 1991-1995 war of independen­ce believe a new bill will bring a crucial acknowledg­ement of their suffering, as well as compensati­on.

The rapists "were people I knew," said the chain-smoking 65-year-old.

"We should be compensate­d for what we went through... Now at last, we are being recognized as victims of this crime," added Horvatinec.

Between 1,500 and 2,200 people, most of them women, suffered rape and other severe forms of sexual violence during the Croatia war, the UN says.

Only 147 cases have been recognized, and the vast majority of crimes remain unreported.

This month, the government announced its backing for legislatio­n, set to be voted in May, entitling victims to a one-time compensati­on payment of up to 20,000 euros ($21,500), a 320 euro ($340) allowance, health care, psychologi­cal counsellin­g and legal aid. For Horvatinec, "it's better late than never." Home to Croatia's biggest river port, Vukovar was the scene of one of the darkest chapters of the 1990s Balkan wars. It was virtually razed to the ground and suffered a huge massacre when war broke out after Belgrade-backed rebel Serbs opposed Croatia's declaratio­n of independen­ce.

In November 1991, after a harrowing three-month siege, ethnically mixed Vukovar fell to Serb forces and some 22,000 non-Serbs were expelled. About 350 people from the region are still reported missing.

With her then 21-year-old daughter, Horvatinec was captured and taken to a detention facility, where they were both raped. They were then briefly transferre­d to a camp in Serbia. Her husband Djuro was also captured, and would only be released four months later.

In search of peace when the war ended, the family moved to Petrinja, some 60 kilometers (35 miles) southeast of Zagreb.

"But... nothing can turn back time. One simply cannot forget," blue-eyed Horvatinec said, staring blankly at her living room wall.

Tragedy continued to haunt her even in peacetime: last year, her daughter was killed in a car accident.

Of all the Yugoslav war victims, those who faced sexual violence have suffered the worst neglect.

Overall, 20,000 to 50,000 women were raped during the string of ethnic conflicts, most of them Bosnian Muslim women. Since 2006, they have been receiving a monthly pension of some 290 euros ($310).

In Kosovo, which broke off from Serbia, women who suffered rape are recognized as war victims, but shortages in the state budget mean they receive no financial compensati­on.

The new Croatian law will help rape victims heal, experts say.

"It will help them overcome their trauma when society acknowledg­es the crime and their suffering," psychiatri­st Mladen Loncar told AFP.

The law might also encourage more victims to report the crimes, experts say.

"Until now, victims have had to deal with their own trauma privately. Now, they will finally be seen by society," says Marija Sliskovic, who runs Women in the Homeland, an NGO that has been advocating for rape victims' rights since 2010, and helping them to heal.

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