A terrorist militia responsible for around 100,000 deaths before
being hunted out of Northern Uganda is regaining strength in the Central
African Republic (CAR), according to a senior Roman Catholic bishop
there.
The Lord's Resistance Army, headed by Joseph Kony, imposed a reign of
terror on the Acholi region of Northern Uganda in the 1980s and 90s.
It
specialised in the abduction of women into sexual slavery and the
recruitment of child soldiers, often in the most brutal circumstances: a
favoured tactic was to force children to kill their parents or siblings
so they believed they would never be able to return home.
The LRA caused disruption to the region out of all proportion to its
size, with terrified villagers becoming "night commuters", walking miles
to places of safety rather than remain in their vulnerable homes.
The pressure saw the group hounded from its base in Northern Uganda
into South Sudan, the Democratic Republic of Congo and then the CAR. It
was thought to have been reduced to only around 200 fighters.
However, according to RNS, a Roman Catholic bishop, Rt Rev Nestor
Desire Nongo-Aziagbia, has said the LRA has become one of the biggest
threats to peace in the CAR.
"They continue to enslave villagers, making them load carriers and sex slaves," he said. "They are also burning down villages."
The CAR has seen an extended period of unrest, with tensions between
the Christian and Muslim communities leading to conflict. Pope Francis
visited the country last year against the advice of his security
advisers and urged an end to hostilities. The LRA has taken full
advantage of the unsettled state of the country. Nongo-Aziagbia said:
"We are concerned there's no political will to defeat the rebels."
"This [resurgence] is of great concern to us," said Sheikh Musa
Khalil, vice chair of the Acholi Religious Leaders Peace Initiative
(ARLPI), a peace-building organisation in northern Uganda. "The group is
still holding our children who it abducted. A resurgence complicates
their return."
The LRA Crisis Tracker website
documents a string of attacks on villages in the north of the CAR,
involving the killing and abduction of adults and children.
Sheikh Khalil's concern reflects one of the most intractable issues
around dealing with the LRA – that it is not just a military problem but
a social and ethical one as well. During the last 20 years it has
abducted many children who have grown up to become fighters and
commanders in its ranks, and are themselves responsible for atrocities
and massacres.
However, the Acholi community and its religious leaders have
generally been opposed to the use of extreme military force to deal with
them as they regard them as victims as well as perpetrators. The LRA
itself began as a resistance movement against forces loyal to President
Yoweri Museveni who conducted a terror campaign against the area after
he came to power in 1986.
The LRA suffered a blow last year with the capture of one of its
senior commanders, Dominic Ongwen, himself aformer child soldier taken
from his family by the group. He was handed over to the International Criminal Court at
The Hague over allegations of crimes including rape, murder, sexual
enslavement and torture. It has not yet decided whether there is enough
evidence to charge him.
However, while some of his victims and their families want him
punished for what he has done, others urge forgiveness. Bishop Nelson
Onono-Onweng, who has been active in seeking a peaceful end to the
conflict with the LRA and undertook a dangerous meeting with its leader
Joseph Kony and with Ongwen in the Congo in 2006, has said that Ongwen
himself was a victim.
"The world betrayed this child. The state, which had the instruments
to protect him, did not. The international community also took too long
to act [against the] LRA. The world can see how things conspired against
him."
Others have argued against bringing even high-profile terrorists like
Ongwen to the ICC at all, saying that if they know they will face
international justice it is harder to persuade them to lay down their
arms. Retired Bishop Baker Ochola, a member of the ARLPI, said on
Ongwen's arrest last year: "The government should not jeopardise the
lives of children and women still in LRA captivity. We appeal to the
government to forgive and set him free. He should be given amnesty as
any rebel who surrenders, renounces and abandons rebellion."
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