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- Path: sparky!uunet!stanford.edu!rutgers!mbcl!imran
- From: imran@mbcl.rutgers.edu
- Newsgroups: soc.men
- Subject: Rape After Rape After Rape
- Message-ID: <2114.2b334166@mbcl.rutgers.edu>
- Date: 19 Dec 92 19:36:06 GMT
- Lines: 200
-
-
- (I posted this before but it seems to have gotten lost. My apologies if this
- is a duplicate)
-
- Hello,
-
- What follows is an article from the New York Times. Why am I posting
- it here? I feel that some of the issues pertain to at least some of the
- threads I have seen in this group (and the other groups that I am posting to).
- The article is about the calculated destruction of the Bosnian Muslims. The
- article contains extremely graphic descriptions of brutality, torture, and
- rape.
-
- I hope this article makes you uncomfortable. I hope this article makes
- you act. Perhaps you will make your friends aware of the situation in Bosnia.
- Perhaps you will write to your elected officials and ask them to act. I am
- doing my part by bringing this to your attention. At the end of the article I
- have included a copy of a letter that I sent to the senators of my state (New
- Jersey). If you wish feel free to use it as is, or to plagiarize from it, or
- better yet write something in your own words.
-
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
- Copied without permission from:
- The New York Times OP-ED Sunday, December 13, 1992
-
- Rape After Rape After Rape
-
- ZAGREB, Croatia. What is happening in Bosnia and Herzegovina to
- Muslim and Croatian women seems unprecedented in the history of war crimes.
- Women are raped by Serbian soldiers in an organized and systematic way, as a
- planned crime to destroy a whole Muslim population, to destroy a society's
- cultural, traditional and religious integrity.
- The numbers are chilling: In October, the Ministry of Interior of
- Bosnia and Herzegovina estimated that 50,000 women and girls had been raped,
- and many impregnated on purpose. It is feared that since then the number has
- risen even further. The ministry collected and documented 13,000 cases.
- Journalists and feminists have interviewed women in refugee camps in
- Croatia, and it is through their stories that the world has discovered the
- tragedy. In the civilized world rape is a crime. Mass rape is a method of
- genocide that should become a war crime and outlawed in all international
- conventions. The lives of tens of thousands of women have been destroyed; the
- world owes them at least that.
- Here are accounts by three women. "E.'s" account will appear in the
- January-February issue of Ms. magazine. -SLAVENKA DRAKULIC
-
- Z.N., age 40.
- As soon as Chetniks [Servs] came into our city, they selected women,
- children and the old people; men were taken to a concentration camp with an
- excuse that they were mobilized. They put hundreds of us in a school in Doboj
- and they turned it into a kind of camp. Our Serbian neighbors locked us in. I
- knew many; they used to visit our house. As soon as we entered a camp,
- "marticevic" [followers of Milan Martic, a Serbian leader] came in with guns
- and selected younger women and girls. They put them in the halls and told the
- Chetniks to do with the women what they pleased.
- There was silence. Then the crazy, dirty, stinking, Chetniks jumped at
- the women like animals; they tore off their clothes, pulled their hair, cut
- their breasts with knives. They'd cut the belly of the women who wore the
- traditional Muslim baggy trousers. Those who screamed would be killed on the
- spot.
- In front of a few hundred prisoners they raped and tortured women and
- girls for days. It was unbearable to watch girls being raped in front of their
- fathers. In the evening, after heavy drinking, the Chetniks would come in the
- hall with lamps. Stepping on us, they would look for girls, not older than 12,
- 13.
- The girls cried, holding on to their mothers. As they were taken,
- pieces of their mother's clothes remained in their hands. While doing that,
- the Chetniks would shoot at us. Later they would leave the girls' dead bodies
- in the hall, so we had to see them. We cried until morning. Then they would
- throw the bodies in the river.
- Every day the same picture was repeated; they would rape and kill in
- front of hundreds of us. Once a young woman with a baby was taken in the
- middle of the hall. It was in June. They ordered her to take off her clothes.
- She put the baby on the floor next to her. Four Chetniks raped her; she was
- silent, looking at her crying child. When she was left alone, she asked if she
- could breast-feed the baby. Then a Chetnik cut the child's head off with a
- knife. He gave the bloody head to the mother. The poor woman screamed. They
- took her outside and she never came back. The biggest criminals in Doboj are
- Bosko Jeitic, Milenko Varnjes, Mico Tuca, the brothers Stankovic and Jorgovic.
- I was raped and tortured too, because they knew that I am a wife of a
- leader of the Muslim party. My neighbor tortured me the most, the one my
- husband respected as his own brother. By the end of June, Chetniks brought
- another neighbor of ours and with a gun pointed at him they forced him to rape
- a 14-year-old girl. He stood trembling and stuttering with fear.
- Then he turned to a Chetnik he believed was a leader and said, "Don't
- make me do it. I have known her since she was born - her father and I drank to
- her birth." They beat him in front of us until he died. It was an example to
- the other Serbs that there is no pity, that one must do what leaders order them
- to do.
- In August some prisoners were exchanged including me and my sons. Many
- women and girls who were pregnant remained in the camp. They were transferred
- to a hospital and fed twice a day because, as the Chetniks said, they had to
- bear their offspring.
-
- E.N., age 14 and her mother.
- E.N: That commander was big, fat, dirty old guy. He had gray hair with
- a white tuft at his forehead. He stank of brandy, really stank. He had a mask
- on. He nodded toward me and ordered me angrily to stand up. We went in one
- room; my legs trembled, I couldn't walk at all. He then pushed me but I
- trembled terribly and inside me everything trembled. I thought he would
- slaughter me and I couldn't ever pray. He asked me crudely if I had ever had
- sex. "Please, don't" - I beg him. Then he pushed me, hit me and threw me on a
- bed, tore off my dress and hit me again. He put his hand over my mouth. I
- screamed again. He hit me; he shouted at me.
- The mother: I heard my child screaming. She called for help. I heard
- his grunting, his howling. My womb hurt as if someone is pulling it out. My
- mind darkened, but there was nothing I could do. My child was suffocating
- under his fist. I heard him: "Is it good, you dog?" He was more and more
- violent. He repeated the same question until she nodded yes. He asked if she
- wants more. I heard her pleading, "Please, don't." He went out of the room
- and said angrily to me, "Don't let anyone touch the little one."
- In other rooms, my sister's daughters were raped in the same way.
- While this was going on, one Chetnik guarded me and my sister. We found my
- sister's dauther unconscious and naked. My dress was torn apart and she had
- visible injuries on her body.
-
- E., age 16.
- The massacre after the attack on my village had been the greatest
- tragedy of my life. I did not know then that destiny had something even worse
- in store for me.
- Several Chetniks arrived. One, a man around 30, ordered me to follow
- him into the house. I had to go. He started looking for money, jewelry and
- other valuables. He wanted to know where the men were. I didn't answer. Then
- he ordered me to undress. I was terribly afraid. I took off my clothes,
- feeling that I was falling apart. The feeling seemed under my skin; I was
- dying, my entire being was murdered. I closed my eyes, I couldn't look at him.
- He hit me. I fell. Then he lay on me. He did it to me. I cried, twisted my
- body convulsively, bled. I had been a virgin.
- He went out and invited two Chetniks to come in. I cried. The two
- repeated what the first one had done to me. I felt lost. I didn't even know
- when they had left. I don't know how long I stayed there, lying on the floor
- alone, in a pool of blood.
- My mother found me. I couldn't imagine anything worse. I had been
- raped, destroyed and terribly hurt. But for my mother this was the greatest
- sorrow of our lives. We both cried and screamed. She dressed me.
- I would like to be a mother some day. But how? In my world, men
- represent terrible violence and pain. I cannot control that feeling.
-
-
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
- December 16, 1992
-
- Shahid Imran
- Systems Administrator
- Waksman Institute
- Rutgers University
- Piscataway, NJ 08855-0759
-
-
-
-
- Senator Bill Bradley
- Room 731, Hart Senate Office Building
- Washington, D.C. 20510
-
- Dear Senator Bradley,
-
- I am writing to urge you to take action on the Bosnian situation. The
- organized destruction of the Bosnian Muslims is a crime against humanity.
- Once again there is the specter of genocide.
-
- Our current policy of wait-and-see is at best the abdication of duty.
- At worst it is a form of realpolitik that demonstrates that we have lost all
- sense of compassion. We as a country are still determining our post Cold-War
- role in global politics. We have taken a few tentative steps in the right
- direction with our relief efforts in Somalia. We must continue in this
- direction. We must take aggressive measures, including the use of U.S. forces,
- to prevent the genocide that is occurring in Bosnia-Herzegovina from reaching
- completion.
-
- I am enclosing a recent Op-Ed article from the Sunday New York Times
- which I would like you to read. The article is a graphic account of some of
- the atrocities that have been committed on the Bosnian people. They are beyond
- human comprehension. They bring to mind words like Treblinka, Auschwitz, and
- Babi Yar. We cannot let this happen again.
-
- I would appreciate it if you would bring these issues to the attention
- of the other members of Congress and to the attention of the President of the
- United States of America.
-
- Sincerely Yours,
-
-
- Shahid Imran
-
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
- If you've read so far you have my thanks.
-
- Shahid.
-
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------
- Shahid N. Imran, Systems Administrator || Phone: (908) 932-4864
- Molecular Biology Computing Laboratory ||
- Waksman Institute/CABM || BITNET: imran@mbcl
- P.O. Box 759, Rutgers University || Internet: imran@mbcl.rutgers.edu
- Piscataway, NJ 08855-0759 * USA ||
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------
-