Netters,
  It is a great idea if Museveni could seek reonciliation with the whole of 
Uganda than cherry pick his points for it. I do not how easy it is for my dear 
Friend and Brother Olara Otunnu to walk straight headed to reconcile with 
Museveni before he walks to his own Kith and Kin to reconcile and seek for 
their blessings. I think Mr Piwang should focus his efforts more on bringing 
Olara Otunnu home and at the same table with everybody else to champion this 
reconciliation bid. I wonder whether he will have a sleepful night really. 
  Just thinking aloud.
  Bwambuga.

Okuto del Coli <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
          Ywekywek, A few months ago I had the chance to meet Olara Otuno when 
he attended a seminary in Stockholm. For the first time I thought he elucidated 
his position in the crisis very clearly. I was very impressed: His position had 
otherwise, been perceived as dubious and mediocre in some spheres.

This time around he was firm in his perspective and went hard on the LRAs 
remorseless attitude ( denial of their own role in the atrocity). Unless he was 
masking, it was doubtless hid sympathy was not LRA biased.

Didn't seem to me like there was any particularly sour blood between him and 
the Ugandan government. But he is a career diplomat, you know. They always 
mask. They will always keep on denying forth coming truth until on the eve.

Hope for the best
noc'l gaumoy


--- On Sun 08/12, Anyo < [EMAIL PROTECTED] > wrote:

  From: Anyo [mailto: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: ugandanet@kym.net, [EMAIL PROTECTED], [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Date: Sun, 12 Aug 2007 14:29:11 -0400 (EDT)
Subject: [Ugnet] Re: Reconciliation-Olara & Museveni

  We should all sign a petition so that Mr. Olara Otunnu can say “Yes to the 
deal.” If Olara Otunnu goes down in History as refusing this deal then we are 
all ‘flipped’. I see online petitions and I have signed a few but I don’t know 
how to generate it. I suggest someone start a petition for Ugandans to sign and 
it will be forwarded to Mr. Olara Otunnu. I believe public opinion can 
influence him. So I hope someone takes up this proposal for an online petition. 
I have read the proposal and I think it is the best for our country. Let us not 
allow Mr. Olara Otunnu to spoil a good thing. Mr. Olara Otunnu should put his 
past behind and look forward.?xml:namespace prefix = o ns = 
"urn:schemas-microsoft-com:office:office" /
Anyo


Anyo wrote:
          Sunday Monitor August 12-18
Museveni, Otunnu reconciliation 
    Chris Obore     KAMPALA

An attempt to reconcile former Foreign Minister Olara Otunnu and President 
Museveni appears to have faltered. Mr Otunnu, until recently the UN secretary 
general’s special representative for children and armed conflict, accuses 
President Museveni of carrying out what he describes as “orchestrated genocide 
against the people of northern Uganda”. 
In return, the government has variously accused Mr Otunnu of being an LRA 
collaborator, a charge he denies. According to State House sources, the idea to 
reconcile the two men was originated by Mr George Piwang, who lives in the 
United States. 
            NO DEAL: Mr OtunnuMr Piwang is the younger brother of Archbishop 
Luke Orombi of the Church of Uganda.
Mr Piwang wrote a letter dated June 6 to the Principal Private Secretary to the 
President, Ms Amelia Kyambadde, asking her for an appointment to meet the 
President. 
He had apparently submitted the same proposal to Mr Museveni’s influential 
brother, Gen. Salim Saleh, with a copy to the President.
Reads part of Mr Piwang’s letter: “I look forward to meeting H.E. to answer any 
questions he may have on my proposal. I recommend that I meet him with Rt. Rev. 
MacBaker Ochola II.”
Mr Piwang said he preferred Bishop Ochola because the churchman had written to 
some friends, including Mr James A. Baker III and Ambassador Andrew Young “to 
help facilitate the reconciliation and peace in Uganda as envisaged”.
Mr James Baker was secretary of state under the first President George Bush, 
and Mr Young, an African-American, was President Jimmy Carter’s ambassador to 
the United Nations.
Although the letter does not name Mr Otunnu, Bishop Ochola on Friday said that 
plans to reconcile the two men were indeed underway.
“We have not yet met but I have heard about that reconciliation,” Bishop Ochola 
said on telephone, adding that “reconciliation is a process and a necessity to 
bring understanding and restore relationships”.
Ms Kyambadde could neither confirm nor deny receiving the letter.
“If it’s a private correspondence, why should I release it to Monitor?” she 
said.
Dr Ruhakana Rugunda, the minister of internal affairs who is currently leading 
the government delegation to the Juba peace talks with the LRA rebels, said he 
had not heard of the efforts.
Dr Rugunda, who has cordial relations with Mr Otunnu, added: “I would encourage 
efforts that promote reconciliation of any conflicting or differing parties. 
Reconciliation between Olara Otunnu and President Museveni is perfectly in 
order and should be encouraged. We need a multi-pronged effort to ensure there 
is harmony and reconciliation in our country.”
But it appears Mr Otunnu does not want to talk to President Museveni.
Responding to an email from Sunday Monitor, Mr Otunnu wrote: “I am not aware of 
a letter dated 6 June, from Mr George Piwang-Jalobo, to the PPS to the 
President. I am certainly not party to any projects that may have been 
described therein.”
He added: “I did see a communication from Mr George Piwang-Jalobo, dated 19 
January 2007, that he circulated to a number of people. Unfortunately, I was 
not consulted beforehand, and therefore I did not give my acceptance to the 
ideas and scenarios for reconciliation proposed in that communication.”
The Chairman of Acholi Parliamentary Group, Mr Livingstone Okello-Okello, was 
also sceptical, saying: “I met Mr Otunnu in June and he did not indicate to me 
that he would reconcile with Museveni.” 
Said Aswa MP Reagan Okumu: “The President has been attempting several times but 
Olara Otunnu cannot reconcile with Museveni. At one time Mr Eriya Kategaya 
tried to talk to Otunnu and they promised him to take ministry of foreign 
affairs.” 
Mr Okumu said such a reconciliation would help Mr Museveni gain acceptance in 
Acholi where he has often lost elections.

MR OLALA OTUNNU ‘S BRIEF PROFILE
    
   Mr Otunnu was born in Mucwini, Chua County, Kitgum District in September 
1950.   
   He attended Makerere University (where he was president of the students 
guild); Oxford University; and Harvard Law School.   
   In the 1970s, as a student leader and later as secretary general of Uganda 
Freedom Movement, he played a key role in the resistance against the regime of 
Idi Amin.   
   After the overthrow of the Obote II government in July 1985, Mr Otunnu was 
appointed minister of foreign affairs by the short-lived military junta.   
   He took on citizenship of Ivory Coast following his stinging attacks against 
Mr Museveni’s regime.   
   While serving the UN, Mr Kofi Annan, the then secretary general, thanked Mr 
Otunnu “for his splendid services to the Organisation and, in particular, for 
raising the profile of United Nations efforts to protect children in armed 
conflict”.   
   Mr Otunnu founded and currently heads the LBL Foundation for Children, a New 
York-based non-profit organisation committed to promoting education and healing 
for children around the world, especially those whose lives have been 
dislocated by war 


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