Scores of women and girls were sexually assaulted after peace deal in Ethiopia's Tigray, study shows

FILE - A Tigrayan refugee rape victim who fled the conflict in Ethiopia's Tigray sits for a portrait in eastern Sudan near the Sudan-Ethiopia border, March 20, 2021. A new study of medical records released Thursday, Aug. 24, 2023 shows that at least 128 women and girls were sexually assaulted in Ethiopia鈥檚 northern Tigray region even after a peace agreement ended a two-year conflict there. Most were sexually assaulted by multiple people, and almost all believe their attackers belonged to military groups. (AP Photo/Nariman El-Mofty, File)

NAIROBI, Kenya (AP) 鈥 Scores of women and girls in Ethiopia鈥檚 northern Tigray region were sexually assaulted, often by multiple men alleged to be combatants, after a peace agreement last year ended the conflict there, according to a new study of medical records released on Thursday.

The youngest girl raped was 8 years old.

The and left untold thousands of women and girls with the trauma of sexual assault.

At least 128 sexual assaults occurred after the peace agreement was signed last November, according to the study, which looked at records from the start of the conflict in November 2020 through June.

With most health facilities destroyed or looted as Ethiopian forces battled Tigray fighters, many women and girls were left without treatment for months. Some now have HIV or are raising the children of their rapists. Others live with incontinence or chronic pain, along with the cultural stigma around such attacks.

The study by Physicians for Human Rights and the Organization for Justice and Accountability in the Horn of Africa, along with a commentary in The Lancet medical journal, looked at more than 300 randomly selected medical records from Tigray health centers focused on helping survivors of sexual violence.

It is just a 鈥渟mall glimpse鈥 of the toll, the authors say, and they fear the chance for justice will be lost if are shut down.

鈥淎ll the community is a victim of sexual violence,鈥 a Tigray-based researcher into conflict-related sexual violence told The Associated Press. A collaborator on the study, he has spoken with hundreds of women and girls and said not one feels healed.

鈥淩ape survivors, they are suffering the most,鈥 he said. Like many Tigrayans, he spoke on condition of anonymity for fear of retaliation from Ethiopian authorities.

At least 128 sexual assaults occurred after the peace agreement was signed last November, according to the study, which looked at records from the start of the conflict in November 2020 through this June.

Overall, 76% of the 304 women and girls whose cases were reviewed were sexually assaulted by multiple people, often three or more. One was assaulted by 19 men.

In 94% of all cases, no condom was used. Many perpetrators also wielded guns, sticks or knives. Some women and girls were abducted for repeated assaults.

鈥淭hey took her to their camp and raped her for six months,鈥 one medical record cited by the study says.

Almost all the women and girls said their attackers appeared to be members of a military group, often from , whose soldiers fought alongside Ethiopian forces against Tigray fighters and allegedly remain in parts of western and northern Tigray.

The findings suggest that 鈥渢hese acts were neither isolated nor random but a systematic use of rape as a weapon of war,鈥 the study鈥檚 authors write in The Lancet commentary.

Spokesmen for Ethiopia鈥檚 and Eritrea鈥檚 governments did not respond to requests for comment.

鈥淚t is absolutely horrifying and devastating to even read the narratives of the patients,鈥 Ranit Mishori, a senior medical adviser with Physicians for Human Rights, said in an interview. 鈥淭he brutality didn鈥檛 skip the children. Many were also raped by multiple perpetrators.鈥

Mishori and her colleague, senior program officer Lindsey Green, expressed concern that independent efforts to understand the conflict鈥檚 toll and bring accountability to the perpetrators are being weakened or shut down under pressure from authorities.

鈥淢ost disturbing to me is the lack of focus on these crimes,鈥 Green said.

Ethiopia鈥檚 government is keen to re-engage with key partners such as the United States, the European Union and global financial institutions after the conflict. On Thursday, Ethiopia was announced as an of the BRICS economic bloc.

But Ethiopia has sharply criticized outside efforts to promote justice and accountability. An human rights inquiry was earlier this year.

Now Ethiopia wants a ended, too, human rights experts say.

After a conflict marked by the blockade of the Tigray region of more than 5 million people, with internet and phone links severed and human rights researchers and journalists barred, the lack of independent inquiry means that the civilian toll could remain largely in the shadows as Ethiopia鈥檚 government moves on.

鈥淭he world has accountability mechanisms, but almost everything is in the hands of diplomats and politicians, which is a recipe for failure,鈥 said Martin Witteveen, an international criminal law expert who worked with the government-created Ethiopian Human Rights Commission until early 2022. He says Ethiopia alone can hardly ensure accountability when its forces and allies committed most of the crimes.

Even now, the study says, survivors of sexual violence in Tigray are still coming forward, but others will never be known.

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