webGuinée/Camp Boiro Memorial
Human Rights Watch
Rebel Abuses Against Sierra Leonean Refugees Returning from GuineaHuman
Rights
Watch Testimonies
(Freetown, Sierra Leone, April 3, 2001) -- Thirty year old Mani, who suffers from a speech impediment, had traveled from Katkama camp in Guinea to Soardu camp, closer to the border, in search of food. In late February he decided to leave Guinea and crossed into Sierra Leone's Kono District. He encountered the rebels in the town of Gbamandu and described what happened:
"I traveled with six other men and three women when we met a large group
of rebels. They accused us of supporting Tejan Kabbah from Guinea. Many of them
then took the three women into the forest. The women had their clothes on. We were
pleading to be released. Five came up to me and said that I was useless to them,
because I am not well. They tied my ankles to my hands and started hitting me with
their guns and boots. It all took a long time and my head was spinning, but I can
remember seeing the women again coming back from the forest with the rebels. They
were naked and their eyes were red and running, and I saw that they had some scratches
on their bodies. They then left with the others and left me behind, unable to move.
After lying there for three days, my relatives found me. They put me on a wheelbarrow
and brought me here. I still can't walk because of the beating."
Sixty-seven year old Kumba left Nyaedou camp with her eldest son Sahr and crossed
into Markor, Kono district late February 2001. She was beaten and they arrested
her eldest son, whom she hasn't seen since. She explained:
"We met them [the rebels] at a checkpoint. They took our luggage and they
told me that they would beat me, because old people tell their children not to
cross the border. They pushed me to the ground and hit me three times on my back
with the butt of a gun. My son Sahr ran up to me and tried to stop them. They immediately
arrested him and tied his hands to his feet. They told him that they would deal
with him later. I managed to get up and I fled into the bush. The last thing I
saw was that two of them lifted Sahr by the arms and carried him away. I haven't
seen him since."
Fatmata, thirty-seven, fled Nongoa camp in the Parrot's Beak region of Guinea with
her husband and baby shortly after the camp was attacked on March 9. At Manowa
in Kailahun, Sierra Leone, the RUF detained a large group of some sixty returnees.
The rebels then targeted her ailing husband. Fatmata described what happened:
"My husband was very sick when we crossed the border into Kailahun. His eyes
and fingernails were yellow. All of us were told to sit on the ground and wait,
while armed rebels were all around us. Four rebels then came up to my husband and
told him to stand up and run. He stood up, but they knew that he could not run.
Then they started beating and kicking him and said that they would continue for
as long as he would not obey their orders. One of them was in his late twenties.
The other three boys were very young, around seventeen. It did not take long. He
bled from his nose and mouth and did not move anymore. They said that if one of
us would touch his body, that person would be dealt with in the same way. None
of us said a word. We were kept there the rest of the day and the following night.
Nobody moved. We received some water but no food. Then the next morning, they let
all of us go. I left my husband's body behind, which had been lying there all that
time."
Due to food shortages in the refugee camps, thirty-year-old Princess and her family
decided in mid-January to leave Nyaedou camp and travel back to Sierra Leone. After
stopping over in the Koloma camp in the Parrot's Beak, they crossed into Kailahun
district. After being stopped by the RUF, she was selected with five other women
of the same age, taken into the bush and gang raped by five rebels. After one week,
they were allowed to pass through. She narrated her ordeal:
"We had traveled from Nyaedou camp to a few other camps in Guinea to flee
from rebel attacks and to find food. Finally we left Kolomba camp mid January and
crossed the border into Gelema, Kailahun. The same day we met armed rebels there,
some ten in number. We were with around thirty people, including my husband and
two sons. Rebels took our property right away, then they walked up to me and told
me to come. They pointed out five other women. They said that they were not going
to kill us, but that they were going to use us until they would be satisfied. They
also said that they wanted peace, but that they would not let us go for nothing.
Then all six of us were taken deep into the forest by five of them, while our husbands
stayed in Gelema town. They said that we would not escape, since our relatives
were still in Gelema town. Then deeper into the forest, all of them raped me, one
after the other, it did not take long. When they were finished with me, they told
me to go. I found my way back to town and found my husband and youngest son, but
I was told that my ten-year old son Vandy was missing. I haven't seen him since.
I met the other women in town later that evening. The only thing they said is that
they [the rebels] had done the same to them as they had done to me. The rebels
did not allow us to leave, but they gave us water and cassava to eat, and left
us alone. There were no commanders among them in Gelema town. After one week we
were allowed to pass through. But my son was still missing."
Thirty-five year old Sia who had been staying in Katkama camp, north of Gueckedou,
in Guinea, was abducted and raped by RUF rebels after crossing the border at the
end of December 2000. She was taken to Koidu town together with some twenty-five
returnees, while her husband was forced to stay behind with other rebels. She described
her ordeal:
"We were with some thirty refugees in our group. All of us were arrested by
armed rebels at Kamanjendoh, after they had taken most of our belongings. Some
three days later we were taken to another village. There they separated the married
men from the women and the unmarried young men. I was in a group of sixteen women
and some ten young men. Our husbands were forced to stay behind with other rebels.
We were told that we had to join them to become their wives, that we would leave
for Koidu. While we were taken away, my son was crying for his father, I was the
only woman carrying children. We had traveled for a few days when we arrived in
Koidu, this was early January. There the men were taken away somewhere else while
the women were put into a big house. After a few days, some men came in with clothes
and cooking materials. The man who gave me the items was callied Sorie. He told
me that I would be his wife. The next day he took me and my children to his house,
where he raped me the same day. I had no choice since I was afraid for my children,
but he treated them well. After two days, nine of the women of my group came by
at night and told me to join them. The other six stayed behind because they were
too afraid to escape. We managed to leave Koidu and traveled through the bush until
we reached Kenema. On the way, the other women told me that they were not raped
but beaten since they refused. They were older than me. My children and me are
here now, but I am worried about my husband."
Fifty-year-old Kumba left Katkama camp on December l0. She traveled with her husband
and four children for several days through Kono district in Sierra Leone, until
they met a group of rebels in Tongoma town. She described what happened to her
twenty-five year-old son Sahr:
"The rebels were many in Tongoma, they carried guns and wore combat trousers.
They took our shoes and clothes, some of us were stripped down to our underwear.
Then they surrounded my eldest son, Sahr Allieu, and told him that they were going
to train him how to fight. Sahr told them that he would refuse to be trained. They
argued for a short while, and then one of the rebels shot him from behind in the
head. The rebels around him scattered and my family and I went up to Sahr in distress.
He was dead. The bullet came out in the front. We stayed there to bury my son,
but most refugees were allowed to pass through after their belongings were taken
away. While burying Sahr, the rebels dropped the body of another man next to Sahr's
body. We had to bury that man as well. His name was Tamba [also a refugee]. I knew
him because he was the son of an old lady I knew from Kono. Besides Sahr and Tamba,
I saw two more dead bodies that day in Tongoma town."
Twenty-nine year old Njama left Katkama camp in Guinea and crossed into Kono with
her husband and two children at the end of November 2000. In early December, they
arrived at Kamanjendoh, where the returnees of their group were detained and the
young men and women separated from the elderly. Njama's husband refused to be separated,
she described what happened:
"At Kamanjendoh, all of us were put in a house where the rebels selected the
young men and the young women. The two groups were separated by a mat. They told
the young men in our group that they would be trained. They then choose the women
they preferred who would cook for them. We, the women who came with a husband,
were told to forget about them, because we were with them [the rebels] now. My
husband became upset when they separated us. He told them that he was legally married
to me and that nobody would stop him from being together with me. I could hear
them arguing. My husband was angry with them for doing this to us. The next morning,
early, I just heard one gunshot. Some refugees who had been washing at the river
ran up to me and told me that they had killed my husband. I went to the back of
the house to where the sound came from. He was there, they had shot him in the
chest because he had argued with them. They warned me not to cry for I would be
killed too. My husband's name was Kai Sam, he was in his thirties. One rebel felt
sorry for me. He was also a Kono by tribe, just like me. My husband was also a
Kono. He wrote me a letter to help me pass through the other checkpoints. A few
days later, I sent my children into the bush to fetch water. They understood, and
I followed soon after. I arrived here in this camp [in Freetown] at the end of
February."
Finda, twenty-five years, left Baladu camp, north of Gueckedou, with her three
children at the end of January. She was arrested with over twenty other refugees
at Jagbwema, Kono district. She described:
"They [the rebels] were ten in number. They took our luggage from us and split
the group in two. Five young boys from the group were separated and the rebels
said they were going to mine. Two of the boys were around twenty years, the other
three were somewhere between twelve and sixteen. I don't know what happened to
them. That night they [the rebels] discussed what to do with the rest of the group.
We could hear them talking about the message they had sent to 'Burkina Faso', which
is a base just behind Gandorhun (Kono). The message was about whether they should
take us along or release us. Than we heard that more troops were on their way.
That made us so afraid that we planned to escape. That same night, many of us managed
to get out through the bushes."
Bintu, twenty-seven years, fled Masakondou camp, with many other refugees. In early
February on their way to Sierra Leone, they were stopped by RUF rebels at the border
town of Dangadu. Bintu described how she was raped by two RUF rebels.
"We came in by truck, some forty of us. We met the rebels at Dangadu, which
is at the border with Kono but still in Guinea. There we had to offload. Most refugees
had to strip naked and we were searched. They took most of our property, even the
clothes of my children I was carrying. Then two of them came up to me and held
me. I resisted and pointed at my husband, telling them I was married. They went
up to him and tied him up. Then they took me off the road far into the bush. I
was carrying my seven months old baby on my back. Inside the bush, they took the
baby of my back and pushed me to the ground. They said that they would deal with
the refugees today. Then they raped me in turns. It lasted for a couple of hours,
after that, they let me go. I picked up my baby and went back to the road where
I met my husband. Everyone else was gone, I don't know where to. We left for Koquima,
which is some 50 miles from Dangadu. It took us 15 days to reach the hospital in
Koquima. I was in pain so we could only travel for a few miles per day."
Twenty-nine year old Sia left Baladu camp on the December 6. The next day, she
crossed through Koardu, into Kono with her family, where they encountered a large
group of RUF rebels. She described what happened then:
"All our bags were searched. They took property from us, and told the men
not to move. Then they took us, some thirty women, away under gunpoint to the village
of Koardu. Once there, one of them called me into the bush. He told me to come
with him to collect my belongings, which would be returned to me. When I was close
to him, he grabbed me by force and took me into the forest. If I would scream he
said he would kill me. He raped me once, then I was let go. When I arrived at the
village again, the other women had left already, but I managed to join them further
down the road. My children were with them. None of us decided to go back to where
we had left our husbands. We had no choice but to move on. On the way, we talked
about what had happened to us. A number of women spoke about being raped, just
like what they did to me. I can't exactly tell how many but it was more than five.
Others complained about the loss of their belongings. All of us went to Koidu,
which was a two-day-walk. My father, who lives in Koidu, took me to Freetown to
get a medical check-up. I was treated in Connaught hospital. My husband is still
missing."
Kadiatu, thirty-two-years, left Kissidougou town in Guinea in early January. She
crossed the border into Koinadugu district with some thirty refugees. On their
way to Kabala, they met rebels who screened the returnees; looking for Guineans
and weapons. Kadiatu and at least one other woman from their group were screened
separately from the others and gang-raped. She narrated her ordeal:
"All of us arrived at Dankawali checkpoint where rebels told us to stand in
line. They were checking whether there were any Guineans among us. They checked
our properties and took whatever they could use. They occupied an old school building
and asked the women in, one by one. A woman name Fati was called in before me.
It took a long time before she came out. Then it was my turn. There were five men
inside the room. One of them lifted up my skirt to see whether they liked my thighs.
They found my legs smooth. They said that they needed me to have a good time, and
ripped my clothes of. The first one who was called, 'Hold Me Cap', raped me three
times while he was asking all kinds of questions about Guinea. He told me not to
worry since they [the rebels] would retaliate. Then the second raped me twice.
He was called 'Lebanese'.I started to feel pain so I offered the third one the
little money I had left so he would stop after one time. The fourth man asked me
what tribe I was. He then said that he would use me only once since he had a good
friend who was a Temne by tribe, just like me. By the time the last one used me,
I was dizzy and in a lot of pain. I hardly reacted anymore and I think he noticed
because he did it slow to me and got up after a few minutes and left. I was released
but could barely walk. All of us were released the same day and were told to move
on. In the next village, Fati was complaining about pain in her abdomen. Then of
course I knew. There was no chance to hide it from each other. I have a painful
infection ever since during that day."