I was channel flipping (and flipping out) all day yesterday, as I lay in bed with idle time on my hands due to a toothache. Attempting (in vain) to find coverage on the tube of SoS Hillary Clinton’s discussions and remarks in the Congo on the rape of women in the region. The AP had this story:
Clinton on mission for Congo war women
Clinton will personally comfort survivors of sexual violence and meet in the town with DR Congo’s President Joseph Kabila, whom she said she will be “pressing very hard” to take action to stop the assaults.
The top US diplomat, one of the most prominent female leaders in US history, told students in DR Congo’s capital Kinshasa on Monday that the sexual violence in the country was “one of mankind’s great atrocities.”
According to the United Nations, at least 200,000 women have been raped in the eastern DR Congo since 1996 with the pace of atrocities growing even worse after troops launched the offensive in one of Africa’s most tragedy-struck nations.
“We have seen in the late 20th century and now in this century a terrible trend of using sexual and gender-based violence as a tool of war to intimidate and demoralise populations,” Clinton told local Radio Okapi.
Instead, NBC, CBS, ABC, CNN, MSNBC (I don’t look at FOX) focused on a short remark made during a meeting with students in Kinshasa, which was the result of a mistranslation.
I am deeply saddened (yet again) that at a time when the worlds most high profile woman, is speaking out against violence against women, in a region where women’s lives mean next to nothing, that the coverage of her efforts has been virtually ignored and we are given trivia instead.
Though Charles London, in his piece at the Huffington Post has called for more than moral outrage from Clinton, I am outraged that the TM hasn’t even bothered to cover that.
The State Department also alerted the press that the Secretary’s visit to Goma, the former rebel capital of the eastern DRC, will emphasize the scourge of sexual violence that has made that region the rape capital of the world. Since the joint operation between the armies of Rwanda and Congo began to route out rebels last winter, over half a million people have been displaced and incidents of sexual violence have skyrocketed, with all parties to the conflict being implicated in gruesome sexual attacks on civilians, according to a July 15th report by the UN Secretary General. State and non-state forces alike are plundering the countryside and abusing the population in horrific ways…
Chillingly, the government army of the Congo has even been accused of setting up bases near schools so that the soldiers have easy access to pre-pubescent “wives.” Though sexual violence is now a crime in the DRC, the police are inadequate to the task, notoriously corrupt, and those committed officers who are trying to bring perpetrators to justice, have no standing to take on the military. MONUC lacks the resources to effectively address this problem and prevent acts of violence. Their officers, while trying to get a handle on the situation, lack the language skills to communicate with the local population, and they remain under-resourced to address the scale of the crisis.
I have spent time in the Congo, though not in DR Congo. I have paid visits to the progressive women of the Republic of the Congo, formerly Congo-Brazzaville, where revolutionary women were playing key roles in establishing a new nation after the destruction of the colonial period.
As a woman, as an activist for women’s rights and health I am proud to see our SoS address these issues, and hope that we, as a nation will take a leading role in combating violence against women.
Watch this trailer for the documentary
The Greatest Silence: Rape in The Congo
But I’m disturbed at headlines that read:
“Hillary Clinton loses her temper in Congo”, or “Bill’s not secretary of state, I am, Hillary Clinton snaps”, or “Hillary Enraged By Student’s Question”.
Not providing links – but I wish that some of you would leave a few comments at any of these “news items” you run across.
TM = Trivia Media.
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