Abstract:
- The Liberian authorities has authorized emergency relocation help for the household of an eight-year-old rape survivor after her mom reported intimidation, unauthorized filming, and repeated visits by strangers following media protection of the case.
- Officers say the choice was pushed by safety issues, with the Ministry of Justice offering US$600 to assist the household transfer, because the little one continues to obtain medical therapy.
- The case highlights ongoing dangers confronted by rape survivors as soon as instances change into public, and raises questions on intimidation, police dealing with of proof, and the state’s response to defending victims.
By Tetee Gebro, gender reporter with New Narratives
The Liberian authorities has authorized an emergency relocation for the household of an eight-year-old rape survivor after her mom reported intimidation, unauthorized filming, and repeated visits by strangers following media coverage of the case. Officers say the intervention was pushed by security issues, underscoring each the true dangers survivors face as soon as instances change into public and the state’s uneven response—typically appearing solely after stress mounts.
The choice follows complaints from the kid’s mom, recognized by her first preliminary N. to guard her and the kid from stigma, who instructed police she now not felt secure in her neighborhood. In keeping with her account, unknown people started showing at her dwelling, whereas conventional gadgets had been left on her doorstep—acts she described as quiet however horrifying warnings.

The state of affairs escalated when, N. mentioned, relations of the alleged perpetrator got here to her dwelling and recorded each her and her daughter with out consent.
“I caught them doing video of me, doing video of my daughter,” she mentioned, describing the act as one other violation layered onto the trauma her household was already dealing with.
Authorities steps in
The case gained nationwide prominence in December when N. confirmed this reporter receipts for funds she mentioned she had been pressured to make on the Temple of Justice courtroom to a public defender and courtroom clerk with a view to see the case towards her daughter’s alleged rapist proceed. She mentioned she had additionally been pressured to pay to move the alleged perpetrator to the courtroom.
Isaac L. George Jr., director of the Justice Ministry’s Sexual and Gender-Based mostly Crimes Unit, condemned the actions of the courtroom officers saying rape victims aren’t required to pay something for justice. “They shouldn’t have taken one cent from her. That was fallacious. It was unethical.”
He promised an investigation into the officers’ actions.
This month, the Ministry of Justice—appearing on directions from the Legal professional Basic—authorized emergency help to relocate the household, in accordance with Isaac L. George Jr., director of the ministry’s Sexual and Gender-Based mostly Crimes Unit.
“The mom complained that unusual individuals have been visiting her dwelling,” George mentioned. “So, based mostly on the safety state of affairs, the Legal professional Basic supplied to discover a place for them.”
George mentioned the federal government supplied $ US 600 to cowl hire for a 12 months, permitting the household to maneuver to a brand new location. He mentioned the funds have already been disbursed and that sufferer help employees accompanied the mom to view the brand new residence.
N. confirmed receiving the funds and mentioned officers suggested her to relocate due to the continuing threats.
“They mentioned I ought to relocate due to the opposite issues which are taking place,” she mentioned.
For N. the transfer represents greater than a change of tackle. She mentioned it provides her daughter an opportunity to heal away from worry and fixed consideration.
“It is going to convey quite a lot of aid,” she mentioned. “It is going to even assist my daughter as a result of she doesn’t need to exit to even play with mates.”
A toddler in therapy, a household underneath stress
Officers say the kid has been receiving medical care because the alleged rape. George mentioned she was initially handled at John F. Kennedy Medical Heart earlier than being transferred to a facility alongside Duport Street, the place the unit continues to help her therapy.
“She’s very lively now,” he mentioned. “Issues are much better than what it was.”
N. described her daughter’s progress in easy, grateful phrases, specializing in what she sees day by day fairly than institutional processes.
“She was bleeding, however now she isn’t bleeding,” she mentioned, including that medical doctors instructed her the kid may require two to 3 years of continued therapy.
The relocation, she mentioned, has introduced a way of safety she didn’t anticipate after weeks of worry and uncertainty.
“I inform God, thanks,” N. mentioned. “It got here to go.”
Civil society: Assist welcome, gaps stay
Ladies’s rights advocates welcomed the federal government’s resolution to relocate the household however warned that such help stays uneven and unsustainable.
This system officer with the Group for Ladies and Youngsters Williette Arthur mentioned emergency hire help could be protecting in high-risk instances however mustn’t substitute practical secure properties and standardized survivor help.
“Relocation help is nice and anticipated,” she mentioned. “However many survivors face related threats and don’t obtain this degree of safety.”
She famous that Liberia’s Home Violence Act of 2019 locations accountability for survivor compensation on perpetrators and warned that alleged filming of the kid and her mom factors to intimidation requiring rapid protecting motion.
Filming allegations increase new issues
N. mentioned she seized the cellphone used to file the movies and reported the matter to police. Officers initially instructed her there have been no photos, however she mentioned she later noticed images and movies on the system.
Police took the cellphone, she mentioned, however no motion adopted.
“Till now, no one get time to search for her,” N. mentioned.
When contacted, Ladies and Youngsters Montserrado County Commander Gary Winpea denied seeing any photos of N. and her daughter and rejected claims of proof mishandling. He mentioned the cellphone was returned as a result of retaining it could have been illegal.
Whether or not the case can nonetheless transfer ahead after the cellphone’s return stays unclear.
The story was a collaboration with New Narratives as a part of the “Investigating Liberia” challenge. Funding was supplied by the Swedish Embassy in Liberia. The donor had no say within the story’s content material.
