Back news, rubber

Warning: This article contains distressing content, including rape descriptions, from the beginning.
“He told me that if I tried to escape, he would kill me.”
Pascaline, 22, remembers the words of his rapist in rubber jail, the largest city of the eastern Democratic Republic of the Congo, at the earlier hours of 27 January.
“I was forced to allow this to happen instead of losing my life,” Pascaline told the BBC.
She was the second man to rape him with Munozoz. The first attack was very violent that he had passed.
His attackers went to the wall from the male blocks to the next door called “Safina”, he said.
“We heard noise when they jumped in water tanks. There was a lot of them, and we were afraid. The unfortunate were raped.”
The chaos spread in prison, and the adjacent town. Rwandan-backed rebels in the m23 of the rubber, after a rapid advance of the region.
Most prison guards and the authorities in the city fled. The shooting is heard outside the prison.
During the time, within the compound, there was a fire – apparently laid by male prisoners as they attempted to escape.
Mornings, about 4,000 inmates are broken. But only a few of the girls have been away. A total of 132 female prisoners and at least 25 children were burned to death, according to two sources.
An UN officer tells the BBC “at least 153 women die”, quoting “reliable prison sources”.
One month back to Pascaline at Charred Shell in prison complex, where an empty Watch Tower still stands.
She wants to tell her story and ready to be known. He is also a voice for the dead.
She walked to the main yard of the women’s section, wearing the torn walls, scattered cooking pots and clothing piles. His hand came to his mouth with an empty horror, and he shook his head.
“At a point I don’t know what is happening yet,” he said. “After seeing others who died I started to give up myself, I would say that God wanted to save me.”
Pascaline, a SLOY SELLER, stabbed the bars here when his employer was accused of his stolen.
Nadine, 22, returned to prison for the first time. In his mind, he could not escape it.
“If I sleep at night, all I have seen here will come back to me. I see the dead – as I see here until I don’t open like animals here.”
Nadine said he also raped both men.
“They went with alcohol together,” he told the BBC. “They like people drugs. They bring me to the strength. They take all the girls here.”
The BBC could not stop how many women were raped that night, from a total of 167, said, held.
Nadine was angry with the authorities – for the first place to be in the unpaid debt, he said, and then failed to release him.
“I don’t think justice can be in Congo,” he said. “I judge the way the government is running.”
The Government of Dr Congo – more than 1,500km (1,000 miles) the distance to the capital Kinshasa – no longer runs anything in the rubber. The rebels are fully controlled and continued to grow east.
Among heaps of ash carpet in prison prison after fire, there was a small pink sandal, burned on one side. Some shiny buttons glitad on dirt beside it, perhaps from children’s clothing.
The prisoners allowed prisoner to keep one of their children in prison. Only two children survived the prison blast, according to a source. Child prisoners – made by a separate block – released earlier in the day.

Not only the smoke and flames kill the weakest, according to a detailed account from another survivor aged 38, which does not want to be known. We call his florence.
He said “The children began to die” when tear gas was shot in the women’s section.
“The prison is surrounded by soldiers and police, instead of going to the fire, firing bullets and tossed tears to us,” Florence said.
“When tears gas were dropped to us, the fire was intense. Our eyes were torn as Chilli poured them. There was no way to breathe,” he added.
The fire and the rapelas are kept in confusion, in all parts are eager to blame others.
Human right groups say that rape is widespread as a weapon of the DR Congo war of two rebels of M23 and government forces.
However, in this case, Florence says it’s companions with the inmates.
“You saw that they were prisoners. Some went out of shoes. When they went to the prison in the girls, they called the names of their knowledge or uniform.”
Florence said he heard “bullets of crackling” outside the prison from 23:00 before, and escaped the prisoners killed by the police outside.
“If a prisoner went out, he was shot. In flying bullets, I knelt down to God to save us in bad condition.”
Some prisoners breaking the women’s section seek for a safer escape path, he said.
They break one of the walls facing out – a place where police are not usually set. But soon the gap was filled with fire.
Florence first saw the flames at about 04:00. Then every time, he rushes from the body to the body.
“People died in front of our eyes. I couldn’t figure them out. We tried to revive them by giving the water. The BBC.
He also blames Congolese authorities for the loss of many lives.
“The state should open the doors to see fire or coming and release it.”
BBC has contact Kinshasa government asking for a response to the saved but we have not received.
Florence says women’s jail opens at the end of 11:00 – he doesn’t know who – and he went out of 18 more survivors. They are not helped.
“Even the police we found in the street, didn’t ask for news of prisoners, or asked if someone was hurt, or what we used to be,” he said.
After the rebels fighting there in parts of the city, who entered at about 8am. Rubber falls.
Women are not as important – in or from prison.

In a tent in the fields of rubber’s hospital, we met another survivor, Siform, 25, pulled from the flames of a friend.
He lay on his left side – any other position is very painful. Her right arm is heavy band, and has scores to burn her arm and her face. He burned him too. If his dresses were changed nurses should give his morphine.
But his pain is more physically.
His two-year-old daughter Esther died in prison.
“I have a boyfriend in my back. If we want to escape, something falls on him. A bomb? I don’t know what. He died in the area.
He added that Esther just started walking and “innocent”. Sometimes he play with other children in prison, but he is mostly beside his mother.
How was Sifa, a nuts seller, biting air in the bars in a prison with his daughter?
He was accused of being involved in a robbery, which he denied. He said he was imprisoned without being judged. Local sources say a common event.
The whole story of what happened in munozoze prison probably doesn’t know. It seems that those in power do not have a hurry to find.
Sifa and the other survivors we say to what we say no one has contacted their testimony about the horrors of 27 Jan – not the rebels controlled by the rubber now, even the government of Kinshasa Runs in jail.
“No one is the following (this case),” says Sifa. “Nothing to be ignored. It’s over.”
Additional reporting from BBC Wiets at BBC, Göktay Kalaltan and Yvonne alive.
Further about the kidding of Dr Congoy:
