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NEWS
Rape, the mob's latest weapon in
Kenya
By Adrian Blomfield in Kisumu 04/01/2008
Hundreds of women and children, including boys as young as five, have
been gang-raped in a wave of sexual violence that has swept Kenya in the
aftermath of last week's disputed presidential election.
As ethnic hatred mounts in a country teetering on the brink of
catastrophe, disturbing reports are emerging that angry mobs are adding
rape to their arsenal of revenge.At a hospital for women in the Nairobi
suburb of Hurlingham, doctors said that they had treated 24 women and 13
girls over the past four days.Three boys were also admitted after being
repeatedly sodomised. "Most of them have been gang-raped, one of them by
10 men," said Rahab Ngugi, the hospital's matron."We believe we only
know about a fraction of cases because most people have no transport to
get to hospitals or are still trapped because of the security
situation."
The vast majority of the victims had been assaulted in their own homes
and all had been targeted because of their tribe, the doctors said.
Most were members of President Mwai Kibaki's Kikuyu tribe, attacked in
Nairobi's slums by other ethnic groups who support Raila Odinga, his Luo
challenger.
The mobs had smashed their way into their homes, the women told doctors.
Attacking everyone they found inside with machetes and clubs, the youths
raped them in front of their husbands, some of whom were later killed.
Aid workers said they had received reports of similar attacks across the
country, although no statistics are available.
It was not just in Nairobi's slums that sexual violence has been
reported.
As opposition protesters attempted to march to a rally in the centre of
the city yesterday, a British woman in the prosperous suburb of Kilimani
told The Daily Telegraph that she had witnessed an apparent sexual
attack on a young woman from the balcony of her home.
As mobs set fire to a nearby petrol station and police opened fire in
the air, three young men took advantage of the mayhem to grab a slim
woman of about 20, dressed in white jeans and a blue top, who appeared
to have been inadvertently caught up in the violence.
"As they advanced on her, she started backing away," the British woman
said. "She was begging them in Swahili, saying 'please, please, please'
over and over again.
"They took her behind a wall and I couldn't see what happened but I
could hear the screams.
"I felt so helpless. It was too dangerous to go outside. If I had a gun
I would have gone and shot them, but I didn't so there was nothing I
could do."
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