“I don’t have enough clothes or even soap to clean her,” Ms. Ipangba said of her child. “I pray to God to guard me and give me strength to watch over my child because it’s just me who has to take care of her.”

Gladis Koutiyote said she, too, had a child with a Ugandan soldier who promised to marry her. She said some Ugandan soldiers did bring her “a little bit of sugar in a cup and some rice.”

“I used it for just one day and then it was finished,” she said.

The girl who said she was raped in the fields at 13 said she had to drop out of school to take care of her child. She wants the soldier to go to prison and to provide money for the baby’s care. But she said she was not sure she would ever get justice.

She still walks miles to a field to grow beans, manioc and maize to eat. “But I’m scared,” she said. “I worry that he could come for me again.”

Brigadier Karemire, the Ugandan military spokesman, said the Ugandan investigations were finished. He said that no cases of rape or statutory rape were registered here in the Central African Republic, and that there was no plan to support any children left behind. All Ugandan forces will be gone from the Central African Republic within a few weeks.