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December 24, 2009
Dr Denis Mukwege publishes a monograph on sexual terrorism in the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC)
By Alex Engwete
An article describing the new monograph on sexual terrorism published by Dr Denis Mukwege of the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC).
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Monday June 8, 2008, Bukavu (DRC)--
Ms Rama
Yade, then French Secretary of State for Human Rights (currently, for Sports),
touring Panzi Hospital with Dr Denis Mukwege
Two years
ago, I published here in OpEdNews the article "Sexual Terrorism: Bureaucratic
Realism vs. Academic Word-mongering malpractice." In that article, I bemoaned
the lack of African scholarly work on the unique phenomenon of the horrors of sexual
terrorism in eastern Congo, or when an attempt by African scholars was made to
apprise it, it took the irresponsible form of "word-mongering" (as evinced by
Achille Mbembe whom I even accused
of "academic malpractice"
), and hailed the 2004 seminal report by two USAID bureaucrats--Marion
Pratt and Leah Werchik --entitled "Sexual Terrorism: Rape as a Weapon of War in
Eastern Democratic Republic of Congo: An assessment of programmatic responses
to sexual violence in North Kivu, South Kivu, Maniema, and Orientale Provinces
(January 9-16, 2004)."
I also relayed what Dr Denis Mukwege, who has been at ground zero treating the women victims of sexual terrorism in eastern Congo, said at the time about this phenomenon: "We don't know why these rapes are happening, but one thing is clear: they are done to destroy women."
Since then,
Dr Denis Mukwege has been dubbed the Angel of Bukavu and received numerous
awards in recognition of his great work at Panzi Hospital in Bukavu--including the
Olof Palme Prize and the African of the Year Award (both awarded in 2008) and
in November 2009 the prestigious French Légion d'honneur, all these awards in
recognition of his work in fistula repair surgery.
Some of Dr
Mukwege's supporters have even expressed outrage by the fact that the Nobel
Prize committee overlooked him this year in making President Obama the
laureate.
Furthermore, sexual terrorism in eastern Congo doesn't rest on the bedrock of "the
perception, deeply embedded in patriarchal societies, that women's sexuality is
a prefecture of male ownership, and it is linked to the persistence of unequal
gender relations and particularly to the way women's bodies are regarded." Again,
Drs Mukwege and Nangini could have avoided this pitfall by reading Pratt and
Werchik's report-essay.
What I find most fascinating in Drs Mukwege and Nangini's paper, however, is the positive correlation they statistically establish between areas of "mineral wealth" and "regions where REV is rampant." And I wonder why they didn't "unpack" on this aspect besides the statistical table they provide.
Finally, I also found very interesting the notion of sexual terrorism as a form of "biological warfare," which could have benefited by drawing on Foucault's concept of "biopolitics" and by therefore describing sexual terrorism as a "biopolitical war"--thus showing the extent of its full reverberation."
Despite these flaws, Drs Mukwege and Nangini's monograph contributes nevertheless to the understanding of the harrowing sexual terrorism befalling women of eastern Democratic Republic of Congo.