Several women have stepped out to reveal how Sudanese soldiers allegedly sexually abused them in exchange for food for their families.
Over two dozen women who fled
the Sudanese city of Omdurman said that having sex with soldiers was the only
way they could access food or goods that they could sell to raise money to feed
their families, according to a new damning report by the Guardian UK.
A victim reportedly said the
assaults took place in factories across the city where the food is stockpiled.
“Both of my parents are too old and sick and I
never let my daughter go out to look for food. I went to the soldiers and that
was the only way to get food – they were everywhere in the factories area,”
said a woman, who was forced to have sex with soldiers at a meat-processing
factory in May last year according to the Monday morning, July 22 report by The
Guardian.
The assaults reportedly began
soon after a civil war broke out in the country which has seen the country’s
army fight against paramilitary Rapid Support Forces.
The report alleges that
soldiers have also demanded sex in exchange for access to abandoned houses
where it is still possible to loot items to sell in local markets.
One woman said that she was
allowed to take food, kitchen equipment and perfumes from empty houses after
she had sex with soldiers.
“What I went through is indescribable, I would
not wish it on an enemy … I only did it because I wanted to feed my children,”
she said.
Residents of the city claimed
they see soldiers bringing women to abandoned houses where they were made to
queue up as soldier picked the ones “they liked the look of”
“A lot of women come and queue
outside our neighbourhood. I sometimes hear screaming but what can you do?
Nothing,” one resident said.
Another woman said that once
she refused to have sex with the soldier they tortured her and burned her legs.
The 21-year-old lady said she
had previously had sex with soldiers in exchange for being allowed to loot
houses for food and goods, but when she refused to do so again, the soldiers
held her down and burned her legs.
A soldier, who denied ever
assaulting a woman himself, said he had witnessed his colleagues. “It’s awful.
The amount of the sins in this city can never be forgiven,” he said.
Reports of rape by armed forces
emerged just days after the conflict started on 15 April 2023.
The war in Sudan has killed
tens of thousands of people, with some estimates placing the d£ath count as
high as 150,000. The war has created the world’s worst displacement crisis,
with more than 11 million displaced
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