Could this be an attempt by our government to hide the
truth from foreign eyes?


Subject: ugnet_: Should foreign journalists film or
not film Gulu kids?
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Gulu kids fall prey to faje journalists -Sunday
Vision, 20th July 2003 
 
BEDTIME: Children asleep at Gulu taxi park where they
spend nights for fear of abduction by Kony’s LRA
rebels
 
By Henry Lubega 

BOGUS foreign journalists are beginning to cash in on
the misery of Gulu’s school children. The greedy
“journalists” are reportedly peddling pictures and
videos of kids, who sleep on the streets of Gulu for
fear of being abducted from their homes by LRA rebels,
as those of child soldiers. 

The army recently held five such journalists and
blocked them from further filming. Military sources
say the UPDF is now seeking the deportation of the
five scribes, all of them Danes. 

The five were found in Gulu town taking photographs of
Acholi children sleeping in the taxi park and on the
verandas. 

An officer from the 4th Division said the five were
taking video footage of the children to peddle claims
that UPDF uses child soldiers. The street with the
sleeping kids is what the newsmen seek to portray as a
UPDF camp, the Division officials said. 

In the middle of this week the police chased away
another Spanish female journalist. She was in the park
to film the sleeping children without permission. 

For some time now children staying in the suburbs of
Gulu have been flocking to the main town to escape
possible abduction by the LRA rebels. Thousands of
children mostly aged between five and fifteen years of
age leave their homes in the evenings and spend the
night in open places in town where they feel more
secure from the rebels. 

Some of them walk from as far away as seven kilometres
every evening to come to the city centre for the
night. They repeat the journey in the morning. This
age group has been the most vulnerable to abduction by
the rebels. 

Queues of young children both boys and girls start to
form towards town as early as 5:00pm. On a bad night
like the one I spent in Gulu it rained. Despite the
heavy downpour which lasted over four hours the
children are not deterred. They scramble for the only
open building with a roof. Just a few metres away from
the suffering children is the Alobo night club. 

With music coming from there the children at least
have something to keep them company over night. The
brave ones get out into the open and dance to the
Lingala tunes. 

The few who are attending school carry their books to
the park and do their revision at the park. With free
lighting unlike at home they can read at leisure. The
majority of them have resigned to the fate of sleeping
in the park. 

David Onen, a 12-year-old boy, is a primary five pupil
at Gulu Public School. He has been spending his nights
in the taxi park for one and half years and he is
looking forward to the end of the war. 

Coming from Lacor area he prefers to sleep in town. 

“It is safer here that at Lacor Hospital. It is not in
the city centre. It can be attacked anytime. But the
rebels have never attacked the town. They cannot get
here. Three of my brothers were abducted and I never
saw them again. Now I’m the only son left in the
family. I have to make sure am safe from the rebels,”
he says. Onen is the second last-born in a family of
five. 

Six in the morning is time for the children to start
the long journey home. Unfortunately, some men have
taken advantage of these children, mostly the girls by
approaching them under the guise of trying to help
give them a better accommodation for the night. They
end up being sexually abused by these men. 

This introduces more danger to the children: that of
HIV/AIDS and early pregnancies. 

Some of the girls confess to the presence of such
people. The Gulu Resident District Commissioner, Max
Omeda, says such people are believed to be in town and
the authorities have deployed security personnel to
deal with the situation. 

Last week Johan Van Hecke, a Belgian member of the
European Parliament, who is also the chairman of
Friends for Uganda Association in Belgium, paid a
visit to the children in the park and promised to
spend a night with them. Van Hecke says that he has
requested the district authorities to grant him
permission spend a night with the children for a night
next month. 

Van Hecke has been instrumental in tabling the issue
of the northern Uganda in the European Parliament
which has resulted in the passing of three
resolutions. The most recent was passed three weeks
ago in Brussels and it was agreed that the European
Parliament asked the United Nations Security Council
to pass a resolution on the crisis in northern Uganda.
The parliamentarian says the aim of his sleeping there
will be to raise awareness that this is not only
political disaster but a humanitarian one too. 

Van Hecke says when the European Parliament returns
from recess he is going to ask it to ensure that the
international community stops using double standards. 

“When fighting terrorism, other parts of the world
like Iraq gets action while for Africa it is just
declaration,” he says. 
Enda

Published on: Sunday, 20th July, 2003
 
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T.A.A.

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