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- Xref: sparky alt.activism:19843 alt.conspiracy:13436 talk.abortion:53077 talk.rape:2991
- Path: sparky!uunet!portal!cup.portal.com!L-Bueno
- From: L-Bueno@cup.portal.com (Louis Alberto Bueno)
- Newsgroups: alt.activism,alt.conspiracy,talk.abortion,talk.rape
- Subject: ONE MUSLIM SCHOOLGIRL'S TALE OF TERROR (Was re: Rape After Rape
- Message-ID: <72465@cup.portal.com>
- Date: Sun, 27 Dec 92 00:19:49 PST
- Organization: The Portal System (TM)
- Distribution: world
- References: <2097.2b2f8fba@mbcl.rutgers.edu>
- <BzGL99.IHz@news.cso.uiuc.edu> <BzGoKJ.6wt@dcs.glasgow.ac.uk>
- <1992Dec18.114411.2198@ccsvax.sfasu.edu> <72433@cup.portal.com>
- <1992Dec26.220701.10614@ncsu.edu>
- Lines: 204
-
- After seeing The New York Times being dissed as an unreliable source, I
- decided to present to all the single-source nay-sayers here another source
- for the "war propaganda" that's been spewing from the Balkan conflict as of
- late. I'm not advocating armed intervention, nor am I hoping to incense
- future jar-heads enough to catch the first mission to Bosnia to bayonet
- some naughty Serbs. This is just another tale from another tabloid.
-
- Oh, I'm sorry, I forgot... the entire U.S. media is controlled from
- a *SINGLE* source anyway, so what's the use? :-)
-
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
- Copied without permission from:
- The Washington Post, December 26, 1992
-
- ONE MUSLIM SCHOOLGIRL'S TALE OF TERROR
-
- By Peter Maass
-
- ZENICA, Bosnia-Before the local Serb warlord took Mersiha away from
- her apartment to rape her on June 9, he told her not to cry. Mersiha, a
- Muslim schoolgirl, would be safe with him.
- Then, Mersiha, 17, said in a lengthy interview here, the Serb
- ordered her, her 15-year-old sister and an 18-year-old friend into a car
- and drove them to a motel in their home town of Visegrad. The notorious
- Bosnian Serb White Eagle militia had just seized Visegrad, and Mersiha
- sensed in a terrifying instant that the victors were starting to divvy up
- the female spoils of war.
- The girls were taken to the Vilina Vlas motel, which has been
- described by the Muslim-led Bosnian government as one of the Serbs' alleged
- "rape motels." Mersiha was locked in one room, her friend was locked in
- another. Mersiha's younger sister, Emina, was put in a room across the
- hall. A few hours later, Mersiha heard her sister moaning and sobbing, but
- she never saw her again.
- The warlord, Milan Lukic, who has been well-known locally for
- years, came into Mersiha's room, put a table in front of the door and told
- her to undress.
- "He said that if I didn't do what he wanted, I would never go
- home," Mersiha recalled, speaking in a nervous but constant voice. "Then he
- ordered me to take off my clothes. I didn't want to do that. He said I
- must, that it would be better to take my clothes off myself or else he
- would do it, and he would be violent."
- Mersiha paused in her narration. She tightened her hold on the hand
- of her older sister, who is a student in Zenica and sat next to her
- throughout the interview, which was conducted in this government-held city
- in an empty pizzeria decorated with a few paltry Christmas ornaments.
- Mersiha stared hard at a spot on the tablecloth and resumed speaking.
- "I started to cry. He said I was lucky to be with him. He said I
- could have been thrown into the river with rocks tied around my ankles. But
- I didn't want to do it. He got angry and cursed and said, `I'm going to
- bring in 10 soldiers.' "
- And so Mersiha, who had never had a boyfriend, tried to stop crying
- as she was raped.
- According to the Bosnian government, more than 30,000 women have
- been raped in this former Yugoslav republic's nine-month-old war, with some
- of the victims as young as 12.
- The government, partly supported by testimony from Muslim victims
- and captured Bosnian Serb soldiers, accuses the Serbs of employing rape as
- a tactic to "boost morale" among the victorious fighters and humiliate
- Bosnian women and their families. A captured Serb soldier in Sarajevo has
- told journalists that men in his unit were ordered to rape. The soldier,
- Borislav Herak, admitted to violating two Muslim women at a "rape motel"
- outside Sarajevo and then killing them.
- This practice of mass rape, the actual numbers of which have not
- been confirmed, has been condemned by the United Nations and the European
- Community. Each organization is sending investigative teams to the former
- Yugoslavia to interview rape victims and determine the extent of sexual
- crimes here that EC leaders described earlier this month as "acts of
- unspeakable brutality."
- Most Muslim rape victims who have survived their ordeal are
- unwilling to talk to anyone - spouses, siblings and especially journalists
- - about what they have been through. Their moral code of silence may make
- it difficult for investigators to collect firsthand testimony.
- One hindrance to disclosure is the resentment that many Muslims
- feel toward Western reporters trying to investigate this latest atrocity in
- the Bosnian war. The Bosnian government is publicizing the rape issue in an
- effort to galvanize support for its fight against the Serbs, but many
- lower-level officials and ordinary people view the Western interest in mass
- rape as an example of how the West loves to be entertained with lurid tales
- of Bosnia's misery - then do nothing about it.
- Mersiha, who escaped Visegrad a month after being raped, agreed to
- talk on the condition that her last name not be divulged because her
- younger sister is, if not dead, still in Serb captivity. Mersiha said there
- was one reason why she decided to talk: "I want people to know the truth."
- After a moment, she added, "I was lucky. I survived."
- As in virtually all other rape cases, there was no way to
- independently corroborate Mersiha's story, since there were no witnesses
- and the shadowy warlord who allegedly raped her could not be reached.
- The trouble in Visegrad reached a climax in early June when the
- White Eagle militia, which has been linked to some of the worst war crimes
- in Bosnia, took control of the Muslim city, a once lovely tourist draw on
- the Drina River near the Serbian border. The White Eagles began rounding up
- and murdering fighting-age Muslim men, so most of them fled to the
- surrounding forests to wage a guerrilla war. The women and children had to
- be left behind.
- Lukic, a tall, handsome and athletic Serb who is said by the
- Bosnian government to have led the "ethnic cleansing" operation in
- Visegrad, came to Mersiha's building on June 9 to inspect its vacant
- apartments. About 11:30 p.m., he entered the apartment where Mersiha, her
- younger sister and mother were staying with friends. According to Mersiha,
- Lukic asked how old they were and, seeing the girls tremble, told them not
- to worry.
- Lukic ordered the three girls to come with him so that they could
- help identify some Muslim youths being held at the city police station.
- When Mersiha's mother pleaded with Lukic not to take the girls, he became
- enraged and started overturning furniture. "I am the law," he screamed.
- The three girls went downstairs and got into Lukic's car. They did
- not go to the police station. They were taken to the Vilina Vlas motel,
- which has between 20 and 30 rooms. They did not see any other women there
- except for the middle-aged Serb receptionists, who were joking with
- soldiers milling around the lobby.
- The girls initially were locked in one room together. But after
- about 10 minutes, Lukic came to the room with a soldier and told Mersiha's
- 18-year-old friend to go with him for "questioning." Mersiha overheard
- Lukic tell the soldier in the corridor to "question her but not too much."
- Other soldiers in the hallway began laughing.
- The same scenario unfolded with Mersiha's sister, Emina. Lukic
- entered with a soldier and told 15-year-old Emina to leave with the
- soldier. He gave the same order - question her but "not too much." There
- was more laughter in the corridor.
- Lukic left Mersiha alone in the room for about 10 minutes. Then he
- came back, put a table in front of the door and gave the order to undress,
- followed by the threat of rape by 10 soldiers if she did not comply.
- After the rape was over, Mersiha began crying again. She said in
- the interview that she was crying for her younger sister, not for herself.
- It did not matter. Lukic taunted her, she said. "What do you want to do to
- me?" he sneered. "Stuff me into a big artillery gun and shoot me to
- Turkey?"
- Mersiha said Lukic fell asleep. Some soldiers knocked on the door
- and one of them shouted to Lukic, "We know what you've got in there and we
- want it too." Lukic told them to go away.
- Then Mersiha heard the voice.
- "At about 3 o'clock, I heard a loud cry when the door across the
- hall was opened. The girl inside that room started to cry. I recognized the
- voice. It was my sister."
- Mersiha has not seen or heard from her sister since that moment.
- At about 5 a.m., Lukic ordered Mersiha to get dressed, and then,
- much to her surprise, he drove her home. Mersiha's terrified mother was
- waiting for her in the apartment building's entryway.
- "I decided to not tell her that I was raped," Mersiha explained.
- "She was crying and asked me, `Where is your sister and your friend?' I
- told her they were okay, they were just staying overnight. I didn't want to
- hurt my mother."
- Mersiha and her mother stayed in Visegrad for a month more, hoping
- that Emina would be freed and sent home. Even though the town's Muslim
- population was under virtual house arrest, Mersiha's mother went to the
- police station almost every day. One time, a Serb policeman simply aimed
- his loaded gun at her and said, "Leave." Another time, she saw Lukic there.
- "Lukic said to her, `What do you want? At least I returned one of
- your daughters,' " according to Mersiha.
- With few Muslims left in Visegrad, Mersiha and her mother had
- little choice but to leave in a bus convoy in the middle of July. Their
- best hope is that Emina is still in Serb captivity. Their worst fear is
- that she is dead.
- Mersiha now lives in a student hostel in Zenica with her older
- sister, Meliha, who was in this central Bosnian town when the rapes
- occurred. Instead of remaining silent and withdrawing, she constantly talks
- about the ordeal with her sister.
- Even so, Mersiha says she has nightmares every night and must sleep
- in the same room with her sister. She gets frightened whenever Meliha goes
- out. Mersiha told her story reluctantly - she avoided talking about the
- rape for the first 45 minutes of the interview. But then it came tumbling
- out, almost nonstop.
- "I want to tell the Westerners the real truth," she said. "I want
- them to stop these crimes. There are plenty of girls in a worse position
- than me."
-
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
- THOUSANDS OF WOMEN ALLEGED TO HAVE BEEN RAPED
-
- By Peter Maass
-
- ZENICA, Bosnia - Two weeks ago, a 22-year-old woman made her way to
- the gynecology ward at the main hospital here and asked doctors for an
- abortion. The woman, from the eastern Bosnian town of Foca, said she had
- been repeatedly raped by Serb soldiers and had just escaped.
- She was 4 months pregnant.
- "She insisted on having an abortion," said Sead Sestic, head of the
- hospital's gynecology department. "She didn't understand the danger for her
- health, that we couldn't do it. She cried. It was painful. We didn't know
- what to tell her."
- The woman, who had come to the hospital alone, left it alone,
- trudging off into a shabby city filled with refugees and despair. But in
- the saddest of ways, she was not alone. There are, according to the Bosnian
- government, at least 30,000 other women who have been raped by Serb
- soldiers.
- "We see a lot of pregnant women, and we imagine that they were
- raped, but they won't talk about it," said Selma Hecimovic of the Center
- for the Investigation of War Crimes and Crimes of Genocide Against Bosnian
- Muslims, which is headquartered here. "They talk about other women being
- raped but not about themselves being raped."
- At the Zenica hospital, doctors perform about nine abortions a day,
- which is three more than they performed in peacetime. The doctors suspect
- that rape is the reason, but they do not make inquiries when women ask for
- an abortion in the first 10 weeks of pregnancy.
- In conservative Muslim culture, the rape of a woman is not just a
- personal tragedy; it is viewed as an attack on the woman's family. Nothing
- can ever be the same again. If the rapes are, indeed, aimed at demoralizing
- all Bosnians, as the government maintains, then the aim has been partly
- achieved.
- "It is a double humiliation," said Hecimovic. "The women were
- humiliated when they were raped, and the men were humiliated for being
- unable to protect them."
-