”At no stage in my years of study had I been taught how to deal with
8-year-old victims of gang rape in a rural clinic without enough sutures
to go around.”
– Dr. Halima Bashir, a young Darfuri woman whom the Sudanese
authorities have tried to silence by beatings and gang-rape, writing in
her memoir “Tears of the Desert,” which will shortly be published in the
United States, at considerable risk to herself. One day she gave an
interview in which she hinted that the Darfur reality was more
complicated than the Sudanese government version. The authorities
detained her, threatened her, warned her to keep silent and transferred
her to a remote clinic where there were no journalists around to
interview her, she recalls in the book, as cited by New York Times
columnist Nicholas D. Kristof. Then the janjaweed attacked a girls’
school near Halima’s new clinic and raped dozens of the girls, aged 7 to
13. The first patient Halima tended to was 8 years old. Her face was
bashed in and her insides torn apart. The girl was emitting a haunting
sound: “a keening, empty wail kept coming from somewhere deep within her
throat – over and over again.”
Courtsey:Global Development Briefing
——————————-
Pinky Pradhan’s comment
This is one of the worst form of human rights violation. Its beyond my imagination that world over, its children who have to face the consequences of civil unrest or inadeaquecy of the Government to book the criminals. In India, too, everyday , one gets to read about crime such as rape,sodomy or sexual abuse of minors, as young as six months old.My housemaid’s 3 month old daughter was also not spared. I fear at the very thought of being a mother …

8 comments
Comments feed for this article
September 12, 2008 at 1:58 pm
kriszha
What a heartbreaking article and comment.
I hearty appreciate your clean thoughts towards the society and for the people.
All the best
Kris
November 30, 2008 at 11:34 am
U.K
How can people be so cruel? Raping a six months year old? May he burn in hell.
December 12, 2008 at 2:25 pm
Pinky
Dear Kris…
I appreciate you sharing my and the anguish of so many other people….
Thanks
Pinky
December 12, 2008 at 2:25 pm
Pinky
I didn’t quite get your name ..but yes, i second that may he burn in hell….
February 9, 2009 at 7:44 pm
Rajneesh
This is horrendous, we call ourselves human beings ? but behaving worst than animals. The culprits should be tortured first and then hanged till death to make this world a safer place.
February 10, 2009 at 5:49 am
Pinky
Dear Rajneesh,
Well yes that is my first reaction as well. But you know, we need to go to the deeper root of the problem and try to address. it is only then , we will be able to address this problem. Rape is an universal problem. Its a person’s mental frame of mind and social conditioning which induces the person to commit such a heinous crime. We also need to be more supportive towards the victim who has gone through a lot of phsyical and mental trauma. Stigma and discrimination further add to their woes.
February 10, 2009 at 5:57 pm
Rajneesh
The rape is fuelled by a superstition, which I do not want to mention here. This superstition is believed my men in africa, india…as well, somebody educate these morons. How revolting!!!!
February 11, 2009 at 4:34 am
Pinky
Yes, I agree .The superstition is this that -if i am not wrong (based on my experience of working in the area of HIV/AIDS and on human traffikcing, where men have sex with virgin thinking that it will cure them of a lot many diseases ) :
a) it will cure them of venerable diseases including HIV/AIDS ( which is so so untrue) b) it proves their manhood and manliness and improves their virility and fertility.
But you are right in saying that eductaion is a must, especially in a patriarchal society.