Source: IRIN
Ivoirians who have fled across the border to Liberia have reported  incidents of rape, sexual abuse and murder to NGOs and human rights  groups working in Grand Geddeh and Nimba counties.
 
 Children in villages in Liberia’s Nimba County have told field workers  at NGO Equip that they were forced to watch as their mothers were raped  and then killed. In several cases, the children themselves were then  sexually assaulted.
 
 A woman told Equip staff she was forced to watch while armed men raped  her four-year-old daughter. Most attacks have taken place outside  villages as people tried to flee, or at checkpoints, refugees said.
 
 Refugees say sexual assaults have been committed by both armed  supporters of Laurent Gbagbo and of Alassane Ouattara, as well as  militia members at checkpoints, and to a lesser extent, opportunists who  have preyed on refugees’ vulnerability. 
 
 Equip is working in 23 clinics in Nimba Country to assist survivors of  sexual violence and abuse in getting the medical and psychosocial  attention they need.
 
 Sexual violence has become increasingly prevalent in Côte d’Ivoire over  the past decade, Human Rights Watch (HRW) senior West Africa researcher,  Corinne Dufka told IRIN. 
 
 “During times of political upheaval sexual violence has a clear  political link, but unfortunately the general sense of lawlessness in  Côte d’Ivoire for the past decade has led to a disturbing increase in  sexual violence countrywide.”
 
 HRW has documented over 20 cases of politically motivated rape by  pro-Gbagbo military forces in which the ethnic and political element was  clearly identifiable, as well as reports of what appear to be  politically motivated rape by Ouattara supporters, Dufka told IRIN. The  organization has also documented extra-judicial killings perpetrated by  supporters on both sides, stating that some incidents “risk becoming a  crime against humanity should it become widespread or systematic”.  
 
 Ouattara spokesperson in Paris Sogona Bamba told IRIN impunity would not  be accepted. “Ouattara has stressed he does not want to see impunity on  our side, or the other side. We do not support ‘selective  indignation’.” She went on to say: “We are caught up in a cycle now and  we need to break out of that cycle and punish all those who have  committed acts of violence, whether from Gbagbo’s side or Ouattara’s  side.” 
 
 Murder, massacres
 
 Ivoirians who fled to Liberia have also reported having witnessed murders. 
 
 A man in his early thirties who is currently sheltering in Zwedru in  Nimba County fled into the bush after seeing 12 people murdered by  people who he says were pro-Ouattara militia near the Liberia border,  according to Equip country director David Waines. 
 
 Though order has been restored in parts of the country, said Waines -  notably in Danané, a town in western Côte d’Ivoire - “there are still  degrees of anarchy throughout the country… People are operating with  complete impunity… They are getting away with rape, murder and every  kind of human rights abuse.” 
 
 Refugees are arriving in Liberia traumatized, exhausted, hungry and  often sick, say NGO staff. “All along the Liberia border in Nimba  County, I met refugee children who couldn’t smile… They were too shocked  by the violence they had seen,” said NGO Plan International’s disaster  risk specialist Berenger Berehoudougou in a 6 April statement. Most of  the refugees he spoke to came from villages near Duékoué where up to 800  people were allegedly massacred. 
 
 “Horrific journey”
 
 One woman, Félicité, from Daloa in western Côte d’Ivoire, arrived in  Liberia naked, with three children under six. She had been attacked by  bandits in Côte d’Ivoire who stole her clothes and all her possessions.  Her sister died en route. “It was a horrific journey… They had to run  from gunfire; they saw dead bodies along the road; and they were forced  to wade through rivers,” said Berehoudougou.
 
 Many children are arriving without their parents, says Save the  Children’s emergency manager in eastern Liberia Rae Mcgrath. “The longer  they are separated from their parents, the bigger the chance they won’t  be found,” he told IRIN. The organization is placing children with  temporary foster families while it traces their relatives.
 
 Most refugees are reporting that the violence is ethnically and  politically driven, say NGOs and rights groups. The political  fault-lines in this region are largely along ethnic and religious  grounds. Violence in the west has also been linked to longstanding clashes over land that have pitted local communities against outsiders. Waines,  just back from talking to refugees in Nimba Country, said: “There is a  large ethnic dynamic to this violence - targeted ethnic killings and  attacks are driving the dynamic.”; Many of the refugees he spoke to are  too nervous to return to Côte d’Ivoire, for fear of reprisal attacks  under a change of guard. 
 
 Human Rights Watch has urged Ouattara and commanders in his military -  known as Forces Républicaines de Côte d’Ivoire (FRCI) - to publicly  order all members to abide by international human rights law, and  investigate cases of extra-judicial killings and other abuses, and hold  perpetrators accountable.  
 Ouattara, in a 31 March televized statement, urged FRCI and all military  and paramilitary forces who have supported him to refrain from  committing atrocities.