'Choose - I kill you or rape you': abuse accusations surge in Ethiopia's
war
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[January 23, 2021]
By Michael Georgy
HAMDAYET, Sudan (Reuters) - The young
coffee seller said she was split from family and friends by an Ethiopian
soldier at the Tekeze river, taken down a path, and given a harrowing
choice.
"He said: 'Choose, either I kill you or rape you'," the 25-year-old told
Reuters at the Hamdayet refugee camp in Sudan where she had fled from
conflict in Ethiopia's Tigray region.
The doctor who treated her when she arrived at the camp in December,
Tewadrous Tefera Limeuh, confirmed to Reuters that he provided pills to
stop pregnancy and sexually-transmitted diseases, and guided her to a
psychotherapist.
"The soldier ... forced a gun on her and raped her," Limeuh, who was
volunteering with the Sudanese Red Crescent, said the woman told him.
"She asked him if he had a condom and he said 'why would I need a
condom?'"
Five aid workers for international and Ethiopian aid groups said they
had received multiple similar reports of abuse in Tigray. The United
Nations appealed this week for an end to sexual assaults in the region.
Among a "high number" of allegations, particularly disturbing reports
have emerged of people being forced to rape relatives or have sex in
exchange for basic supplies, the U.N. Office of the Special
Representative on Sexual Violence in Conflict said in a statement on
Thursday.
Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed's government and the military did not
immediately respond to questions from Reuters about the reports of rape.
Ethiopian authorities have previously denied rights abuses, pointing the
finger instead at the Tigray People's Liberation Front (TPLF), the
region's former ruling party whose forces they accuse of insurrection.
"I call on all parties involved in the hostilities in the Tigray region
to commit to a zero-tolerance policy for crimes of sexual violence,"
U.N. special representative Geraldine Boezio said in the statement.
Women and girls in refugee camps within Ethiopia appear to have been
particularly targeted, and medical centres are under pressure for
emergency contraception and tests for sexually-transmitted infections,
the statement said.
Reuters could not independently verify the accounts of rape. Media have
been largely banned from Tigray, aid agencies have struggled for access,
and communications were down for weeks.
ABUSERS IN UNIFORM
The 25-year-old woman who spoke with Reuters said her abuser wore an
Ethiopian federal army uniform.
The five aid workers said other women described their alleged assailants
as being militia fighters from Ethiopia's Amhara region or Eritrean
soldiers, both allied with Abiy's troops. Reuters was unable to
determine the identity of the woman's assailant.
Abiy's spokeswoman, Tigray's interim governor, the mayor of the regional
capital Mekelle, Eritrea's foreign minister and Ethiopia's army
spokesman did not immediately reply to requests for comment on rape
allegations. Reuters could not reach TPLF representatives.
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An Ethiopian woman who fled war in Tigray region carries a jerrycan
of water as she walks at the Um-Rakoba camp on the Sudan-Ethiopia
border in Al-Qadarif state, Sudan November 19, 2020. REUTERS/Mohamed
Nureldin Abdallah/File Photo
"I don't have any information about that," Amhara regional spokesman
Gizachew Muluneh told Reuters by phone.
Ethiopia and Eritrea have both denied that Eritrean troops are in
Ethiopia, contradicting dozens of eyewitness interviews, diplomats
and an Ethiopian general.
'WHY IS A WOMAN RAPED?'
At a meeting of security officials in Mekelle broadcast on Ethiopian
state TV earlier this month, one soldier spoke of abuses even after
the city had been captured by federal forces.
"I was angry yesterday. Why does a woman get raped in Mekelle city?
It wouldn't be shocking if it happened during the war ... But women
were raped yesterday and today when the local police and federal
police are around," said the soldier, who was not identified.
Local authorities did not immediately respond to efforts to seek
comment on whether any soldiers might be investigated or brought to
justice.
Tewadrous, the refugee camp doctor, described two other rape cases
he had handled. One woman, who said she had escaped from Rawyan town
in Tigray, told of three soldiers she identified as Amhara special
forces knocking at her door, the doctor said. When she refused them
entry, they broke in and assaulted her.
An aid worker in the town of Wukro told Reuters victims had
recounted how a husband was forced to kneel and watch while his wife
was raped by soldiers they identified as Eritrean.
A medical worker in Adigrat said he treated six women who had been
raped by a group of soldiers and told not to seek help afterwards.
They found courage to come forward days later, but there were no
medicines to treat them, the medic said.
In Mekelle, one man was beaten up after begging soldiers to stop
raping a 19-year-old, according to a medical worker who treated both
victims. Mekelle charity Elshadai said it has prepared 50 beds for
rape victims.
(Additional reporting by Nairobi newsroom; Writing by Andrew
Cawthorne; Editing by Alexandra Zavis and Nick Tattersall)
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