The (LRA) conflict: Beyond the LRA lobby & the hunt for Kony… and
towards civilian protection – By Kristof Titeca



May 17, 2013










Important to protect civilians from fallout of defeating the LRA
(Image Source: UN Photo Library)

On the 28th of February this year, an unfortunate incident happened in
Garamba National Park, the Lord’s Resistance Army (LRA)-affected area
in North-Eastern Congo. A group of Congolese soldiers went on patrol,
in order to track LRA-elements; while at the same time a group of
(armed) park rangers was patrolling the park. In an area where
civilians were present, both groups noticed each other, and both
groups considered the other group to be the LRA. The shooting between
the two groups, left one Congolese soldier and one civilian dead, and
three soldiers and one civilian wounded. The following day, the park
rangers were actually attacked by the LRA in the same area, but
managed to push them away after heavy fighting. A park ranger later
died of his injuries.  At least, all of this was the official version
of the events, which was communicated by the Congolese soldiers
involved.  Reports from local civil society groups and international
military actors revealed that the above group of soldiers was poaching
in the park: they had killed 2 hippopotamus, and had asked civilians
to help them cutting and transporting the animals. The park rangers
had noticed them, and fighting erupted, which resulted in the above
injuries and killings. In retaliation, the soldiers had attacked the
park rangers the next day. They also threatened to attack any park
ranger leaving the park, or passing through their area. This tense
situation also had a strong effect on civilian life: not only were
civilians wounded through the above attacks; civil society actors
complained that markets could no longer take place, as civilians
feared more violence and attacks by the soldiers, who were blaming
civilians for the park rangers’ attacks.

 These events are illustrative for life in the LRA-affected area in
the Democratic Republic of Congo: the fight against the LRA has led to
a strong militarization of the area, of which various armed actors are
taking advantage. These are not only Congolese soldiers, but also
armed poachers and bandits. All of these actors pose a threat to the
security of the civilian population.  This crucial point is neglected
by a number of external interventions in the area, which are
principally focused on Kony and the LRA. This approach has again been
put in the limelight through the recently launched US War Crimes
Rewards Programs, which gives awards of up to $ 5 million for evidence
leading to the capture of Joseph Kony and the two other top commanders
of the Lord’s Resistance Army. The measure is complementary to
previous efforts to stop the LRA violence, such as the Kony 2012
campaign, which also had a specific focus on Kony in order to end the
conflict.  Both actions explicitly state how they want to end civilian
suffering in LRA-affected areas through their actions – Ben Keesey,
Invisible Children’s CEO for example explicitly stated in an interview
with The Times newspaper,  about the Kony 2012 campaign how “The true
measure of success for this campaign is if people’s lives are getting
better on the ground”.

 These Kony- and LRA-driven approaches have two major problems: one,
they ignore the complex and multi-faced reality of security threats to
people’s lives in LRA-affected areas. The presence of the LRA acted as
a catalyzer for these different threats. Some of these threats were
already present in this area, but became further empowered through the
presence of the LRA. Other threats are inherently related to the fight
against the LRA and the militarization of the area. Second, an
exclusive focus on ‘hunting’ the LRA obscures these other threats, and
makes addressing these more difficult.

 The LRA Crisis Tracker is a good example of the limits of this
‘LRA-only’ approach: this tool, developed by Invisible Children and
Resolve, collects data on LRA incidents in LRA-affected areas. In
analysing the number of LRA attacks, abductions and killings, the
Crisis Tracker indeed is a good advocacy tool to highlight the LRA
threat – and does a great job in silencing misinformed criticisms that
the LRA is no longer active. Yet, the Crisis Tracker in itself
presents a flawed image of the security situation, by only focusing on
one of the armed threats to the population – the LRA, and not looking
at the other threats. The partial nature of these statistics becomes
very clear when looking at other data from the area: the ‘protection
cluster’ coordinated by the UN refugee agency UNHCR, keeps statistics
on ‘protection’ incidents towards civilians in LRA-affected areas in
the DRC – these incidents include rape, killing, abduction, looting,
and so on. These incidents are collected through international NGOS
and local organizations on the ground in the affected areas, and do
not only focus on the LRA. In doing so, they show how the lives of
civilians are a continuous struggle, in which they are threatened by a
variety of armed actors: in 2011, a dramatic 48% of all incidents
against civilians were committed by individual Congolese soldiers,
while (only) 17% were caused by the LRA. The remaining incidents are
caused by bandits (Congolese or South Sudanese), armed poachers (from
as far as Libya, Chad or South Sudan) and local authorities (such as
the police).

This does mean that the LRA is not an important threat. On the
contrary, much of the problems are caused by its presence: many of
these armed actors – and particularly the Congolese soldiers – are
only present in the area because of the LRA. Although the soldiers’
presence to a certain extent indeed deterred the LRA, the presence of
the LRA equally offered a number of opportunities. This sometimes
happened in collaboration with civilian actors, but more often,
soldiers were preying on the civilian population. Various actors, such
as armed bandits and again the Congolese soldiers, have in turn been
copying LRA attacks, in order to put the blame on the LRA. In other
words, the ‘LRA hunt’ allowed individual armed actors to profit from
the situation in various ways – with a strongly negative effect for
the population. As shown by local civil society reports, a rather
cynical example of this dynamic was the trade in ammunition and
weapons by Congolese army actors to the LRA in 2010; something which
was found out after two LRA prisoners disclosed how they were
receiving supplies from Congolese soldiers.

In their efforts to present a simple and accessible story, the
anti-LRA lobby organizations (Invisible Children, Enough, Resolve)
neglect an important part of the local security dynamics, and the
negative consequences of these for the population. While this ‘LRA
only’ view definitely allows to gather funding and attention – as the
Kony 2012 video has shown – this view equally leads to a reduced
effectiveness in interventions, as they are not equipped to deal with
the other threats to people’s lives. Invisible Children’s
high-frequency radio’s in LRA-affected areas are a good example of
this: these radio’s allow remote communities to seek for help in case
of LRA-attacks, and to communicate with other localities. This would
have been useful to protect the population from large-scale LRA
attacks, such as the 2008 and 2009 Christmas massacres (although it
remains unclear how any intervention force could arrive in time). It
however is much more difficult to protect the population from the
small-scale hit-and-run attacks which the various armed actors in
LRA-affected areas are using. And it certainly is much more difficult
to protect the population from harassment from individual Congolese
soldiers, as it simply is (too) risky for civilians to report on army
abuses through these radio posts (as these radio posts are exchanging
military information, the armed forces closely monitor them); and as
soldiers have on occasions controlled these radio posts. Even when
using code language, the operators still fear retaliation. In other
words, a particular view on civilian protection in these areas – in
which only the LRA is perceived as a threat, not any other groups, and
certainly no internal threat – leads to particular interventions,
which are ill-equipped to address all suffering, and report all
incidents. Given the high rate of incidents with soldiers, this is
highly problematic.

Moreover, the ‘LRA only’ narrative  has made it more difficult for
humanitarian organizations active in the area to rally support and
funding for a more holistic approach on civilian protection, which
also addresses these other threats. This ‘messy’ image is much harder
to sell to the wider public, and much harder to intervene in: the
threat is no longer a clearly definable ‘evil’ outsider, but a
multiple threat which consists of both insiders (such as individual
Congolese soldiers, local bandits) and outsiders (the LRA, foreign
bandits, different groups of poachers). Reducing these internal
threats is only possible through addressing the behavior of the
government soldiers, and re-establishing the judicial system and the
general functioning of the state in these marginalized areas.
However, and particularly in 2011 and 2012, humanitarian actors were
complaining that this dominant ‘LRA only’ discourse made it very hard
to find donor money for this: all programs had to be defined as LRA,
whilst the reality on the ground is much more complicated and messy.
Consequently, a number of humanitarian actors were discontent that
they had to emphasize the presence of the LRA in their programs, and
not the other groups. As a result, a number of programs were
implemented which were specifically targeted towards LRA-effects, but
– in a situation of strongly reduced LRA attacks – had relatively
little results; while the increased attacks and dangers of other
actors were not sufficiently addressed.

In sum, the fight against the LRA does not occur in a vacuum: it leads
to a range of abuses, which have been made possible through the fight
against the LRA, and which are inherently related to the
militarization of the region. A strict focus on the LRA in this
‘messy’ security context, and not on how various actors profit from
this situation, further empowers these armed actors, and further helps
these abuses occur. A second important point is that the protection of
civilians equally does not occur in a vacuum. If organisations such as
Invisible Children really want to improve the lives of people on the
ground – as their CEO pointed out – realities on the ground should not
be sacrificed for simple narratives. It is cynical to single out one
threat to civilians (the LRA), while neglecting others, which on a
daily basis constitute a major threat for the civilian population.



Kristof Titeca is a Postdoctoral Fellow from the Research Foundation –
Flanders (FWO), based at the Institute of Development and Management
(University of Antwerp) and the Conflict Research Group (University of
Ghent).

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