Probe into AU troops ‘gang rape’
Abducted, drugged and gang raped in Somalia: a young mother details the most brutal of allegations against African Union troops and Somali soldiers in a case causing widespread anger.
“The soldiers raped me... I tried to defend myself but they beat me badly and I passed out,” she told the Somali Channel television station this month.
She alleged she was stopped on the streets of Mogadishu by three soldiers from the national army, blindfolded and forced into a car, before being handed over to African Union troops and repeatedly raped.
She has needle marks on her arms from where she says drugs were injected during the several hours long assault in the Maslah compound, a Ugandan troop base on the outskirts of Mogadishu.
“There were other women in the room ... one of the them badly bleeding,” she added, speaking from a hospital bed.
The woman, in her late 20s with a young baby, was unconscious during the attack and says she does not know how many men raped her. She was later thrown onto the streets.
AMISOM, the 17,700-strong United Nations-mandated force that supports the government in its fight against al-Qaida-linked Shebab insurgents, said it has launched an investigation together with the Somali army.
“Appropriate action will be taken once the facts have been established,” AMISOM said.
Somalia’s Prime Minister Abdi Farah Shirdon said that the government was “deeply troubled by the alleged rape... involving a number of personnel from AMISOM.”
AMISOM, fighting since 2007 in Somalia and funded by the UN and European Union, insists it “strongly condemns ... sexual abuse or exploitation”.
The force includes troops from Uganda, Burundi and Kenya, with smaller numbers from Djibouti and Sierra Leone.
The case threatens to play into the hands of the Shebab.
Shebab fighters are themselves accused of horrific attacks and rape, but the extremists’ spokesman Ali Mohamed Rage gloated at the rape reports.
“Somali soldiers first abduct the girls and rape them, they also share them with AMISOM troops,” Rage said.
“The Somali troops are the remnants of the former warlords, they are killing their people and raping our daughters and mothers... the African Union troops are brutal.”
In the first six months of 2012, some 800 cases of sexual violence were reported in Mogadishu alone, according to the United Nations Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA).
Many more cases are believed to have gone unreported.
But Maryan Qasim, Somalia’s minister for human development, insisted there was “major exaggeration and inflation of the number of attacks.”
She also said alleged victims who speak out in the media should be “shot.”
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