BANGUI, Central African Republic (AP) — It was too late for the mother to shield her children when the two masked and armed Russian fighters burst into her home, held her at gunpoint and took turns raping her. Her five children were forced to watch in the dark. Seated in a restaurant in Central African Republic’s capital, where she has since fled, she wiped away tears. Two years on, the assault has “stayed with me in my core,” she said. The Associated Press does not identify survivors of sexual assault. She blamed the Russians who are part of the Wagner mercenary group that operates alongside Central African Republic’s army and has been accused by locals and rights groups of abuses. She had seen them patrolling in her town of Bambari before. On the day of the assault, they were fighting rebels there. Gender-based violence is rising in Central African Republic amid ongoing conflict, weak legal and care systems and the stigma of speaking up, locals and aid groups say. |
Palestinians seek unity with appointment of new PMForeign Ministry helped thousands of overseas Chinese, Wang saysMinistry: U.S. practice disrupts normal business activitiesExpanding common ground underpins regional stabilityFM: China supports int'l peace conference on Ukraine crisisXi holds talks with Angolan presidentOfficials refute soEU approves artificial intelligence lawChina's courts see over 100 percent increase in judicial transparencyChina's courts see over 100 percent increase in judicial transparency