
PHOTO BY AP PHOTO/BULLEN CHOL, FILE, In this Tuesday, May 30, 2017 file photo, South Sudanese soldiers accused of gang-raping five foreigners, murdering a local journalist and looting a hotel, are led to their prison van after attending a hearing of their trial in the capital Juba, South Sudan.
JUBA, South Sudan -- The only foreigner to come forward and testify in a high-profile South Sudan trial where army troops are accused of gang rape and murder in a hotel rampage a year ago urged other survivors to speak up, especially men.
In the civil war-torn country, few accused of atrocities ever face justice. Twelve South Sudanese soldiers are accused of gang-raping five foreigners, killing a local journalist while forcing survivors to watch and looting the Terrain hotel compound in the capital, Juba.
"Men have an equal or greater responsibility to come forward," the Italian woman said after testifying last week. "Men don't face the same risk of sexual violence, and they can stand up against these crimes."
The woman spoke on condition of anonymity for fear of retribution.
The attack occurred shortly after fighting broke out in the capital in July 2016 between President Salva Kiir's forces and troops loyal to former Vice President Riek Machar.
An Associated Press investigation last year exposed graphic details of the Terrain assault, including victims' pleas for help from a nearby U.N. base that brought no immediate response. A U.N. investigation led to the firing of the commander of the peacekeeping force there.
The United States government has pressed South Sudan to hold the soldiers accountable and offered support for the investigation.
The trial almost collapsed last month when judges with the military court threatened to dismiss the charges of rape and murder unless the foreign victims and witnesses testified. The judges initially rejected the possibility of remote testimony via online video interviews, which they've now accepted.
The Italian woman, who had been working in the humanitarian sector in South Sudan, said she was afraid to return to the East African nation because she feared the assault could happen again.
She said she decided to return and testify in order to give a "voice to the millions of victims in South Sudan who don't have a voice."
In an interview, she said she identified four of the accused in the courtroom, saying that when she looked at them one by one, she "immediately recognized them."
Her testimony "gave credibility to the trial" and filled a gap when it came to the rape charges, said Philips Anyang Ngong, a lawyer representing the victims.
Human-rights workers monitoring the trial have praised the woman's decision to return to South Sudan to give her testimony.
"We applaud the victim for appearing at trial. We hope this proceeding is a first step toward addressing the much larger problem of impunity for serious human-rights crimes in South Sudan," said Joanne Mariner, senior crisis adviser at Amnesty International.
A Section on 09/02/2017
Print Headline: Testify, S. Sudan hotel victim urges
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