Congoids Talk About why they Rape and Kill

Daily Stormer
June 9, 2014

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Young soldiers in the army of the Democratic Republic of Congo.

The idea that removing  Congoids from the Congo would magically preventing them from their natural proclivity to rape and kill everything that moves, has proved to be one of the most dangerous ideas to have ever come to the White man.

Here we see the Congoids explaining why they do it. The reason that they rape and kill is because it makes them feel ‘free.’ It has nothing to do with their environment and everything to do with the dark and alien soul that animates them.

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Was there a woman taking this photograph?

From the Independent:

The Congolese soldiers march through the night, but not towards battle. In the dark, they are hunting for women who have fled their homes in Minova to hide in the bushes. The women know that if they are seen, they will be raped and maybe killed.

The army has been ordered to retreat to the town, in the eastern Democratic Republic of Congo. Its young soldiers, 2,000 of them, fire gunshots in the air.

The commander gives an order. “Go and rape women,” he says. The soldiers obey.

“It’s true that we raped here. We found women because they can’t escape. You see her, you catch her, you take her away and you have your way with her,” says one soldier later. “Sometimes you kill her. When you finish raping then you kill her child. When we rape, we feel free.”

Nzgira was one of the victims on that night in November 2012, when the mass rape took place. Three men attacked her at once, two of them from the front. She says: “The other said he wouldn’t go where the others left their dirt. So the third took me from the back. I thought I was going to die.”

The women had been raped by militia groups before, but this time their Congolese brothers were their torturers. “I didn’t see their faces,” says Nzgira. “How do you see someone who is hitting you in the eyes? How will you know someone who is inserting a gun barrel in your mouth?”

Masika, the founder of a rescue centre for rape survivors, said: “They made me sit and started touching me,” she remembers. “All the children were around me. Then they started to rape women from the dormitories [of the rescue centre].”

Masika was 15 when she was first raped by a schoolteacher. Later, the militia raped her and her two daughters before killing her husband. After being cast out by her parents-in-law, she decided to offer counselling and shelter to other women who had experienced the same trauma.

She has now become a target for the rapists. “Since I have been doing this work, I have been raped three times,” she says. “I have been beaten, tortured and left to die.” On one occasion, a soldier raped her with his foot.

“When he finished, he spat on me. That’s when I thought about killing myself. I am constantly haunted by this,” she says.

The mass rape in Minova was not an isolated instance. Research from the American Journal of Public Health says that in the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC), 1,152 women are raped every day, or 48 women every hour. Despite the Congo’s conflict officially ending in 2003, fighting has never stopped, claiming more than five million lives since the war started nearly two decades ago. Throughout, sexual violence has continued. A total of 12 per cent of the female population of the DRC have been raped at least once.

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Victims of the Congo war trying to rebuild their lives. At least these ones are not ‘looking for a better life’ in Europe.