/ 23 August 2007

Vagina Monologues author fights DRC atrocities

Eve Ensler has just returned from hell. That is how the author of The Vagina Monologues describes her trip to the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC), where tens of thousands of women have been sexually attacked and mutilated in the African nation’s civil war.

The 54-year-old playwright has joined with the United Nations in a campaign against what a UN expert called the worst violence against women in the world.

”In Congo, you’re talking about a situation where Africans are hurting Africans, black people are hurting black people,” Ensler said in an interview from Italy. ”And it’s harder to make people care. People say, ‘Oh, it’s just Africa.’ And nobody is held accountable.”

She spent weeks at the Panzi Hospital in the city of Bukavu in the eastern DRC, where Dr Denis Mukwege is helping to repair the broken bodies of some war victims. The hospital sees about 3 500 women a year suffering fistula and other severe genital injuries.

A UN human rights expert said last month that the sexual atrocities in Congo’s volatile province of South Kivu extend ”far beyond rape” and include sexual slavery, forced incest and cannibalism.

From Geneva, Yakin Erturk called the situation the worst she had ever seen as the global body’s special investigator for violence against women. She blamed Uganda-backed militias that occupy the DRC’s Ituri region, as well as the nation’s armed forces and national police.

Erturk will report her findings in September to the UN Human Rights Council.

”How do I tell you of girls as young as nine raped by gangs of soldiers, of women whose insides were blown apart by rifle blasts and whose bodies now leak uncontrollable streams of urine and faeces?” Ensler asks in an article in the September issue of Glamour magazine.

The International Criminal Court in The Hague is now considering indictments in connection with the atrocities. The court’s probe started in 2004, instigated by DRC President Joseph Kabila.

Ensler is asking people to write letters to Kabila, demanding that he take stronger action to stop the attacks. She is working to raise both awareness and funds for the women through the UN Action against Sexual Violence in Conflict and through V-Day, a global movement she founded to stop violence against women and girls.

V-Day was inspired by the audience response to The Vagina Monologues, an award-winning play in which actors share anecdotes about their bodies.

The V-Day movement has raised more than $40-million in the past decade, funding thousands of community-based anti-violence programmes and safe houses in Kenya, Egypt and Iraq, as well as the United States. — Sapa-AP