The UN reports that there have been 200,000 acts of sexual violence in the Congo since 1998, 65 percent against children. Since January, more than half of the thousands of rapes reported were perpetrated by the Congolese army, according to Human Rights Watch. That is to say nothing of the more than 2 million displaced citizens, and 5.4 million who have died in connection with the war waged against rebels backed by Rwanda and Uganda.
An AP report which detailed the $17 million of aid the U.S. has pledge to end such violence described the scene at a refugee camp Secretary of State Hillary Clinton visited.
"Residents told Clinton that women and young girls and boys are often victimized by rape when they leave the camp to gather wood or tend to outside gardens. One camp official said a young boy had been raped on Monday.
"One of the two victims Clinton met had been gang-raped after her husband and four children were killed. The other, eight months pregnant at the time, lost her baby and was found by hospital workers in a forest where she had stumbled."
There are no words for the horrors these people have faced in the past decade.
But if you've watched the news those horrific statistics and stories didn't register. That's because Secretary Clinton's umbrage over a question about a Chinese loan offer became the story, instead of the corruption of officials and the sexual warfare being waged throughout the country.
At a news conference, a student in the audience asks Ms. Clinton what Mr. Clinton thinks about a disputed Chinese contract, and she reacted harshly. It's unclear what the student was thinking -- did he misspeak, meaning to ask for President Obama's opinion, instead of Bill Clinton's? Did the translator ask the wrong question? Did one or the other of them think it appropriate to question our top diplomat about her husband's opinion, rather than her own? But the point is that the narrative has switched from life-and-death issues that everyone should be united against, to another "Shrill Hill" sound bite.
"Poor Hillary," her detractors and supporters both say, "She was just so tired! And it must be so hard to see Obama light up the world in his travels; and that Bill, saving those journalists from North Korea, stealing her thunder."
To which I say, give me a break.
Hillary Clinton has been a professional politician, a U.S. senator, a presidential candidate and she is now the secretary of state of the United States of America. She has nothing to prove to the commentators and the pundits; her job is to advise the president on foreign affairs and enforce the policies of the USA.
She was not a petulant child craving recognition, nor does she need your defense. Secretary Clinton had a point to make, and it was this: I am the representative of the most powerful country in the world, and you will respect both my office and me as a human being. While you're at it, why don't you show that same respect to the women of the Congo?
In a country where being female might be a death sentence and rape is used as a weapon against the population, this is not a point to be made lightly. Perhaps it wasn't diplomatic, but it was entirely appropriate for Clinton to defend her position and her dignity in a place where so many wives and daughters have no defense or recourse.
So don't pity Hillary, who in your mind has to compete with her powerful husband and boss. Pity the millions of Congolese who are suffering. And get alongsde her, whether as a feminist or a human being: There's plenty to find offensive in this situation without falling back to either Clinton hatred or misogynistic punchlines.
(Getty Images photo)
1 comment:
(Commennt as posted at Baltimore Sun)
All that Hillary Clinton needed to say in this instance was, "I don't know what anyone else thinks about this Chinese contract but I know what I think!" and then she should have said, "It stinks and the air is redolent with the stench of what the Chinese are doing in Africa!" I think she was just tired and exasperated with what she perceived as belittlement from the good old boys of the Congo. And that is what they are, the rapacious, swaggering soldiers who commit their rapes and turn up brazenly drunk, loud and obnoxious in the taverns of the Congo, never challenged by the authorities, never arrested for their atrocities and never made to answer for their crimes--they, their government cronies and the vast network of the people who have benefited from the chaos in the Congo, are indeed good old boys. The women of the Eastern Congo have been demolished by this African fiasco, what is known as the African World War. So many countries have participated and plundered the Congo's natural wealth, cobalt, copper, tin, coltan, they have murdered the hippos in the Virunga forest for ivory, they have cannibalized the pygmies and massacred villagers to clear up land for exploitation and they have come from all over Africa, from Uganda they made a base in Ituri, from Rwanda to support the Congo's Tutsis against the government, soldiers came but never left, and the dreaded Interahmwe Hutu killer teams from Rwande went into the Congo to support Laurent Kabila and his government but stayed to keep on fighting the Tutsis. Mugabe of Zimbabwe sent soldiers, so did Namibia and Angola--all three fought on the side of Joseph Kabila, Laurent Kabila's son who is now President of Congo and is still struggling to gain control of the entire country. The Hutus rape, the government soldiers rape, and all the stragglers and the thugs from neighboring countries, the mercenaries and the carpet baggers rape the women and the children. Joseph Kabila wants to professionalize his army and he desperately needs money for infrastructure. The IMF protests that he can't take on the debt burden. And lo and behold wouldn't you know it the Chinese come into this pandemonium--as they always do, they can smell it all the way in China the damn opportunists--they want to give Kabila 10 billion and dig out the resources in Congo's soil--and the world watches as this drama that typifies the worst in human nature unfolds day after day. So Hillary Clinton lost her cool--get over it boys of the Congo; stop your impotence and your corruption, arrest the mayhem creators and clean up your act. Rwandans, Ugandans, Angolans and others, stick to the terms of the peace treaty, don't carry on your internal conflicts in the Congo, go home as agreed and stop raping the weak to show your brute force and control. The world is not composed of only the male gender, there are places where women are in power, look down at Liberia where a woman rules--stop making Clinton the story, the story is really your country, a shame to all of Africa.
Posted by: Anonymous | August 13, 2009 9:40 AM
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