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WSWS : News
& Analysis : Africa
Uganda: Hundreds of civilians massacred by Lords Resistance
Army
By Brian Smith
1 March 2004
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A rebel group in northeastern Uganda, the Lords Resistance
Army (LRA) massacred over 250 defenceless civilians on February
21, at Barlonyo refugee camp 400 kilometres north of the capital
Kampala. It is the worst attack against civilians in the last
ten years of an 18-year-old conflict.
Around 300 LRA rebels attacked the Barlonyo camp, in Lira district,
armed with light machine guns, assault rifles and rocket propelled
grenades. They were dressed in brand new uniforms of the regular
army, the Ugandan Peoples Defence Force (UPDF). After ordering
people at gunpoint to go inside their thatched huts, they then
burnt these to the ground. Those attempting to flee were shot,
bludgeoned or hacked to death with machetes. This attack comes
just weeks after the rebels massacred around 50 people in Abia
camp, also in Lira district.
Barlonyo is one of the so-called protected villages
which the government established in order to safeguard the local
population from LRA attacks. It was home to almost 5,000 refugees,
but was defended by just 30 guards, with little experience, who
failed to alert nearby troops. Several thousand Internally Displaced
Persons (IDPs) from Barlonyo camp have fled to a nearby trading
centre at Oguk.
There has been much public anger at the armys failure
to protect the camp. Accusations have been made that sections
of the ruling classin both the army and in governmenthave
collaborated with the rebels. The quality of arms that the rebels
have at their disposal has raised questions also.
Fear of attacks in the camps has meant that crops do not get
cultivated and economic life largely disappears. This is replaced
instead by food aid. Disease and famine are rife.
The LRA has traditionally been backed by the Sudanese government,
whilst the Ugandan government has backed the Sudan Peoples Liberation
Movement/Army (SPLM/A) which has until recently been fighting
against Khartoum. This arrangement is in something of a transitory
stage as Sudan is about to conclude a peace-deal with the SPLM/A,
and the LRA has been driven from Uganda.
In order to deflect criticism, President Museveni has put the
responsibility for the massacre onto the army and its command
structure, accusing it of negligence. Its
very sad, on behalf of the government, or the army, I apologise
to the people because the mistake is on the side of the army,
he said.
Museveni has made a scapegoat of the regional commander, removing
him to headquarters for further training. This is punishment for
allowing an unofficial camp to be set up in his area
with too little security. Museveni has also promised further bases
in the north to combat the LRA.
The LRA are a notoriously brutal outfit, of no more than a
few thousand, which operates in an area covering parts of Uganda,
Sudan and the Democratic Republic of Congo. They are led by Joseph
Kony, a shadowy recluse who claims to have magical powers derived
from the Christian Holy Spirit, and manipulates local beliefs
in witchcraft to rule by fear. He promotes his operation as a
Biblical mission.
Kony proclaims that his intention is to topple the government
in Kampala, which is dominated by southerners, and restore power
to the Acholi people in the north, whom he claims to represent.
It is these very Acholi civilians that the LRA brutalises through
its operations.
The conflict has continued for almost two decades and has cost
some $1.3 billion. Aid agencies estimate that over 23,000 people
have died, and there are also approximately 1.4 million IDPs in
the northeast of Uganda.
The LRA operates by abducting adults and children as young
as seven, largely from the Acholi. They are then used for menial
work and also to raid villages for food, fight against the UPDF,
slaughter civilians and abduct other children. Girls as young
as 12 are given as wives to LRA commanders. Children who attempt
to escape are killed, sometimes by other children who are forced
to trample on them.
The UN estimates that 30,000 children have been abducted since
the 1990s. This has accelerated over the last few years, with
Human Rights Watch estimating that around 10,000 have been abducted
since mid-2002, up from one hundred in 2001. The intensification
followed the return of the LRA to Uganda after the Ugandan governments
Operation Iron Fist against the LRAs bases in
southern Sudan in March 2002.
Escalating rates of abduction have meant that many children
leave their homes at night and head to the relative safety of
the towns. In late 2003, figures for Gulu municipality indicated
16,000 of these night commuters, many of whom walk
up to 10 kilometres each night, returning home the following morning.
Some will sleep rough, or with relatives, others may get a bed
at one of the various shelters that exist.
In July last year some 20,000 children marched through Kitgum
to protest against the abductions.
In December 2003 the Ugandan government asked the newly formed
International Criminal Court (ICC) to help prosecute LRA rebels.
In January ICC Prosecutor Luis Moreno Ocampo announced that he
was considering a probe into the LRA. He has now announced that
he will investigate this current massacre.
This is the second preliminary investigation ever launched
by the ICC, and the first to involve gathering evidence in
the field. The ICC has said that as well as investigating
the LRA it will also look at allegations made against the UPDF.
The UPDF is notoriously corrupt, with officers happy to perpetuate
the conflict since it represents an opportunity for profit. The
UPDF also uses child labour and exploits children for fighting.
Often these are children who have escaped from the LRA. Children
are also recruited into official Local Defence Units (LDUs).
LDUs ostensibly provide security for their villages, but they
are then used also to fight alongside UPDF troops against the
LRA. This is not only in northern Uganda but also in the Congo
and the Sudan.
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