Friends

“The LRA’s brutality [is] unmatched anywhere in the world,” says a 2004 U.N. 
food program booklet. And here are some samples of how Acholi can be brutal, a 
14 year old George was forced to collect the blood of a murdered child and warm 
it in a saucepan over a fire. He was told to drink it or be killed. “‘It 
strengthens the heart,’” he was told by an Acholi commander. Robert, a 
14-year-old from Kitgum, said he and some other children were forced to chop 
the body of a child they had killed into small pieces. “We did as we were 
told,” he said. Beatrice cradled her 1-year-old infant as she recalled her 
forced “marriage” to an LRA officer. “I was unwilling,” she tells me, “but he 
put a gun to my head.” One day at the Children of War Rehabilitation Center in 
Gulu, I saw Yakobo Ogwang throw his hands in the air with pure glee as he ran 
to his 13-year-old daughter, Steler, seeing her for the first time since the 
LRA abducted her two years before. “I thought she was dead,” he said in a 
shaking voice. “I’ve not slept since we learned she’d returned.” The girl’s 
mother, Jerodina, pulled Steler’s head to her bosom and sobbed. Steler stared 
silently at the ground. This is the Acholi brutality this series is trying to 
make public. Paul Raffaelle flew to Uganda and  wrote a piece “Uganda: The 
Horror” it was published by The Smithsonian Magazine February 2005.

Ugandans we need to discuss Acholi violence candidly.


Uganda: The Horror


In Uganda, tens of thousands of children have been abducted, 1.6 million people 
herded into camps and thousands of people killed: A dispatch from the world's 
"largest neglected humanitarian emergency"


By Paul Raffaele  <http://www.smithsonianmag.com/author/paul-raffaele/> 

Smithsonian Magazine 
February 2005 

0

As the light faded from the northern Ugandan sky, the children emerged from 
their families’ mud huts to begin the long walk along dirt roads to Gulu, the 
nearest town. Wide-eyed toddlers held older kids’ hands. Skinny boys and girls 
on the verge of adolescence peered warily into roadside shadows. Some walked as 
far as seven miles. They were on the move because they live in a world where a 
child’s worst fears come true, where armed men really do come in the darkness 
to steal children, and their shambling daily trek to safety has become so 
routine there’s a name for them: “night commuters.”


>From This Story





 

Michael, a thin 10-year-old wrapped in a patched blanket, spoke of village boys 
and girls abducted by the armed men and never seen again. “I can’t get to sleep 
at home because I fear they’ll come and get me,” he said.

Around the time of my trip to northern Uganda this past November, some 21,000 
night commuters trudged each twilight into Gulu, and another 20,000, aid 
workers said, flocked into the town of Kitgum, about 60 miles away. The 
children, typically bedding down on woven mats they’d brought with them, packed 
themselves into tents, schools, hospitals and other public buildings serving as 
makeshift sanctuaries that were funded by foreign governments and charities and 
guarded by Ugandan Army soldiers.

The children were hiding from the Lord’s Resistance Army (LRA), a murderous 
cult that has been fighting the Ugandan government and terrorizing civilians 
for nearly two decades. Led by Joseph Kony, a self-styled Christian prophet 
believed to be in his 40s, the LRA has captured and enslaved more than 20,000 
children, most under age 13, U.N. officials say. Kony and his foot soldiers 
have raped many of the girls—Kony has said he is trying to create a “pure” 
tribal nation—and brutally forced the boys to serve as guerrilla soldiers. Aid 
workers have documented cases in which the LRA forced abducted children to ax 
or batter their own parents to death. The LRA has also killed or tortured 
children caught trying to escape.

LRA rebels roam northern Uganda’s countryside in small units, surfacing 
unpredictably to torch villages, kill people and kidnap children before 
returning to the forest. The LRA’s terror tactics and the bloody clashes 
between the rebels and the army have caused 1.6 million people, or about 90 
percent of northern Uganda’s population, to flee their homes and become 
refugees in their own country. These “internally displaced” Ugandans have been 
ordered to settle in squalid government camps, where malnutrition, disease, 
crime and violence are common. The international medical aid group Doctors 
Without Borders said recently that so many people were dying in government 
camps in northern Uganda that the problem was “beyond an acute emergency.”

Word of the tragedy has surfaced now and then in Western news media and 
international bodies. U.N. Secretary General Kofi Annan has called for an end 
to the violence in northern Uganda, and the U.N. has also coordinated food 
donations and relief efforts in Uganda. “The LRA’s brutality [is] unmatched 
anywhere in the world,” says a 2004 U.N. food program booklet. But the Ugandan 
crisis has been largely overshadowed by the genocide in neighboring Sudan, 
where nearly 70,000 people have been killed since early 2003 in attacks by 
government-supported Arab militias on the black population in the Darfur region.

The U.S. State Department classifies the LRA as a terrorist organization, and 
in the past year the United States has provided more than $140 million to 
Uganda; much of that is for economic development, but the sum includes $55 
million for food and $16 million for other forms of assistance, such as AIDS 
education efforts and support for former child soldiers and formerly abducted 
persons. In May 2004, Congress passed the Northern Uganda Crisis Response Act, 
which President Bush signed in August. It does not provide for funding but 
urges Uganda to resolve the conflict peacefully and also calls for the State 
Department to report on the problem to Congress this month.

Despite some growing awareness of the crisis and recent small increases in 
assistance to Uganda from many nations and aid organizations, Jan Egeland, the 
U.N.’s Under Secretary General for Humanitarian Affairs, said in a press 
conference this past October that the chaos in northern Uganda is the world’s 
“largest neglected humanitarian emergency.” He went on, “Where else in the 
world have there been 20,000 kidnapped children? Where else in the world have 
90 percent of the population in large districts been displaced? Where else in 
the world do children make up 80 percent of the terrorist insurgency movement?”

To spend time in northern Uganda and learn firsthand about the situation is to 
become horrified by the atrocities and appalled by the lack of effective 
response. “The tragedy here is that it’s not an adult war, this is a children’s 
war, these kids are 12, 13, 14 years old and it’s despicable, beyond 
comprehension,” says Ralph Munro, who was visiting Gulu (while I was there) as 
part of a U.S. Rotarian mission to deliver wheelchairs to the war zone. “The 
world better wake up that this is another holocaust on our hands, and we’d 
better deal with it. One day our kids are going to be asking us, where were you 
when this was going on?”

Since achieving independence from Britain in 1962, Uganda has suffered almost 
uninterrupted brutality. Armed rebellions, mostly split along ethnic lines, 
have wracked the population, now estimated at 26.4 million. Up to 300,000 
people were murdered during Idi Amin’s eightyear (1971 to 1979) reign of 
terror. It is said that Amin, who died a year and a half ago in exile in Saudi 
Arabia, ate some of his opponents and fed others to his pet crocodiles. “His 
regime goes down in the scale of Pol Pot as one of the worst of all African 
regimes,” says Lord Owen, who was the British foreign secretary during Amin’s 
rule. Today, many Western governments regard Uganda as a qualified success from 
a development standpoint. It has made significant progress against AIDS, 
promoting condom use and other measures; since the mid-1990s, the prevalence of 
AIDS cases among Ugandans 15 to 49 years old has fallen, from 18 percent to 6 
percent. Still, AIDS remains the leading cause of death of people in that age 
group. Many countries, including the United States, have applauded the 
willingness of soldier-politician Yoweri Museveni, the president since 1986, to 
accede to World Bank and International Monetary Fund dictates on free trade and 
privatization. Uganda claims a 6.7 percent average annual economic growth over 
the past ten years.

But that growth is largely confined to the south and Kampala, the capital city, 
which boasts office towers, fancy restaurants and flashy cars. Elsewhere, deep 
poverty is the rule. With a per capita income of $240, Uganda is among the 
world’s poorest countries, with 44 percent of citizens living below the 
national poverty line. The nation ranks 146th out of 177 countries on the 
U.N.’s Human Development Index, a composite measure of life expectancy, 
education and living standard. Donor countries and international lending 
agencies cover half of Uganda’s annual budget.

Museveni heads a corrupt regime in a nation that has never seen a peaceful 
change of rule. He seized power at the head of a guerrilla army in a violent 
coup 19 years ago, and he has since stage-managed two elections. The U.S. State 
Department calls Uganda’s human rights record “poor” and charges in a 2003 
report that Museveni’s security forces “committed unlawful killings” and 
tortured and beat suspects “to force confessions.”

Museveni’s suppression of the Acholi tribal people, who populate three northern 
districts, is generally cited as the catalyst of the LRA rebellion. Museveni, a 
Christian, is a member of the Banyankole tribe, from western Uganda, and the 
Acholi blame him for atrocities his forces committed when they came to power 
and for denying the region what they say is their share of development funds. 
In 1986, an Acholi mystic, Alice Auma “Lakwena,” led a rebel army of some 5,000 
aggrieved Acholis to within 50 miles of Kampala before being defeated by 
regular army forces. (She fled to Kenya, where she remains.) A year later, 
Joseph Kony—reportedly Lakwena’s cousin—formed what would become the Lord’s 
Resistance Army and pledged to overthrow Museveni. Since then, thousands of 
people have been killed in the conflict—no exact casualty figures have been 
reported—and it has cost the impoverished nation at least $1.3 billion.

It takes four hours, including a crossing of the roiling, whitecapped waters of 
the NileRiver as it plunges toward a waterfall, to drive from Kampala to Gulu. 
Nearing the city, villages begin to disappear, replaced by vast, dreary 
government camps. Gulu is a garrison town, home to the Ugandan Army’s 
battle-hardened 4th Division, and soldiers with assault rifles stroll along 
potholed footpaths or drive by in pickup trucks. Crumbling shops built of 
concrete line the main road. The day before I arrived, LRA fighters, in a 
trademark mutilation, cut off the lips, ears and fingers of a camp dweller two 
miles from the city center. His apparent crime was wearing the kind of rubber 
boots favored by government soldiers, arousing LRA suspicion that he might be 
one himself. The LRA went on to attack a refugee camp along

Kampala Road

, 15 miles away, abducting several children.  Over the years, about 15,000 of 
the children abducted by the LRA have managed to escape or have been rescued by 
Ugandan Army forces, says Rob Hanawalt, UNICEF’s chief of operations in Uganda. 
Many former abductees are brought to Gulu, where aid organizations evaluate 
them and prepare them to return to their home villages.

 The Children of War Rehabilitation Center, a facility run by World Vision, an 
international Christian charity, was hidden behind high shuttered gates, and 
walls studded with broken glass. Inside, one-story buildings and tents filled 
the small compound. At the time of my visit, 458 children were awaiting 
relocation. Some kicked a soccer ball, some skipped rope, others passed the 
time performing traditional dances. I saw about 20 children who were missing a 
leg and hobbling on crutches. One could tell the most recent arrivals by their 
shadowy silences, bowed heads, haunted stares and bone-thin bodies disfigured 
by sores. Some had been captured or rescued only days earlier, when Ugandan 
Army helicopter gunships attacked the rebel unit holding them. Jacqueline 
Akongo, a counselor at the center, said the most deeply scarred children are 
those whom Kony had ordered, under penalty of death, to kill other children. 
But virtually all the children are traumatized. “The others who don’t kill by 
themselves see people being killed, and that disturbs their mind so much,” 
Akongo told me.

One evening in Gulu at a sanctuary for night commuters, I met 14-year-old 
George, who said he spent three years with the rebels. He said that as the 
rebels prepared to break camp one night, a pair of 5-year-old boys complained 
that they were too tired to walk. “The commander got another young boy with a 
panga [machete] to kill them,” George said. On another occasion, George went 
on, he was forced to collect the blood of a murdered child and warm it in a 
saucepan over a fire. He was told to drink it or be killed. “‘It strengthens 
the heart,’” George recalled the commander telling him. “ ‘You then don’t fear 
blood when you see somebody dying.’ ” In Gulu I met other former abductees who 
told equally ghastly tales, and as unbelievable as their experiences may seem, 
social workers and others who’ve worked in northern Uganda insist that the 
worst of the children’s reports have been found to be literally true. Nelson, a 
young man of about 18, stared at the ground as he described helping to beat 
another boy to death with logs because the boy had tried to escape. Robert, a 
14-year-old from Kitgum, said he and some other children were forced to chop 
the body of a child they had killed into small pieces. “We did as we were 
told,” he said.

Margaret, a 20-year-old mother I met at the rehabilitation center in Gulu, said 
she was abducted by LRA forces when she was 12 and repeatedly raped. She said 
that Kony has 52 wives and that 25 abducted girls will become his sexual slaves 
once they reach puberty. Margaret, a tall, softvoiced woman with faraway eyes 
who that day held her 4-year-old son in her lap, said she was the eighth wife 
of a high-ranking LRA officer killed in a battle last year. Sixteen year-old 
Beatrice cradled her 1-year-old infant as she recalled her forced “marriage” to 
an LRA officer. “I was unwilling,” she tells me, “but he put a gun to my head.”

People describe Kony’s actions as those of a megalomaniac. “Kony makes the 
children kill each other so they feel such an enormous sense of shame and guilt 
that they believe they can never go back to their homes, trapping them in the 
LRA,” said Archbishop John Baptist Odama, the Roman Catholic prelate in Gulu 
and head of the Acholi Religious Leaders Peace Initiative, a Christian and 
Muslim organization trying to broker an end to the hostilities.

The highest-ranking LRA member in government custody is Kenneth Banya, the 
rebel group’s third in command. He was captured this past July after a fierce 
battle near Gulu. One of his wives and a 4-year-old son were killed by 
helicopter gunship fire, but most of his 135 soldiers got away. Today Banya and 
other captured LRA officers are held at the government army barracks in Gulu. 
The army uses him for propaganda, having him speak over a Gulu radio station 
and urge his former LRA colleagues to surrender.

Banya is in his late 50s. When I met him at the barracks, he said he underwent 
civilian helicopter training in Dallas, Texas, and military training in Moscow. 
He claimed that he was himself abducted by LRA fighters, in 1987. He said he 
advised Kony against abducting children but was ignored. He denied that he ever 
ordered children to be killed or that he had raped young girls. Banya said that 
when he arrived at his first LRA camp, water was sprinkled on his bare torso 
and rebels marked him with crosses of white clay mixed with nut oil. “ ‘That 
removes your sins, you’re now a new person and the Holy Spirit will look after 
you,’ ” he recalled of his indoctrination.

When I relayed Banya’s comments to Lt. Paddy Ankunda, spokesman for the 
government’s northern army command, he laughed. Banya, he said, crossed over to 
Kony of his own volition. Agovernment handout issued at the time of Banya’s 
capture described him as the “heart and spirit” of the LRA.

The terrorist forces led by Kony, an apocalyptic Christian, could not have 
flourished without the support of the radical Islamic Sudanese government. For 
eight years beginning in 1994, Sudan provided the LRA sanctuary—in retaliation 
for Museveni’s backing a Sudanese Christian rebel group, the Sudan People’s 
Liberation Army, which was fighting to gain independence for southern Sudan. 
The Khartoum government gave Kony and his LRA weapons, food and a haven near 
the southern Sudan city of Juba. There, safe from Ugandan government forces, 
Kony’s rebels sired children, brainwashed and trained new abductees, grew crops 
and regrouped after strikes in Uganda. “We had 7,000 fighters there then,” 
Banya told me.

In March 2002, the Sudanese government, under pressure from the United States, 
signed a military protocol with Uganda that allowed Ugandan troops to strike 
the LRA in southern Sudan. The Ugandan Army quickly destroyed the main LRA 
camps in Sudan. Kony then stepped up raids and abductions in Uganda’s north; 
according to World Vision, LRA forces captured more than 10,000 children in 
Uganda between June 2002 and December 2003.

It was around then that Museveni ordered the Acholi population into the 
relative safety of government camps. “In April 2002 there were 465,000 in the 
camps displaced by the LRA,” says Ken Davies, director of the U.N.’s World Food 
Program (WFP) in Uganda. “By the end of 2003 there were 1.6 million in the 
camps.” At last count, there were 135 government camps. In my three decades of 
covering wars, famines and refugees, I have never seen people forced to live in 
more wretched conditions.

In a convoy of trucks filled with WFP rations, and accompanied by some 100 
armed Ugandan Army soldiers and two armored vehicles mounted with machine guns, 
I visited the Ongako camp, about ten miles from Gulu.

Ongako housed 10,820 internally displaced persons. Many wore ragged clothing as 
they waited for food in long lines in a field near hundreds of small conical 
mud huts. The crowd murmured excitedly as WFP workers began unloading the 
food—corn, cooking oil, legumes and a corn and soybean blend fortified with 
vitamins and minerals.

Davies told me that the WFP provides camp dwellers with up to three-quarters of 
a survival diet at an average cost of $45 a year per person, about half of it 
supplied by the U.S. Agency for International Development. The displaced are 
expected to make up the difference by raising crops nearby. The Ugandan 
government provides little food for the camps, Davies said. The leader of the 
camp residents, John Omona, said there is not enough food, medicine or fresh 
water. More than half of the camp residents are children, and World Vision 
officials say that as many as one out of five suffer from acute malnutrition. 
When I was there, many bore the swollen bellies and red-tinged hair of 
kwashiorkor, a disorder brought on by extreme protein deficiency, and I was 
told that many had died from starvation or hunger-related diseases. “The extent 
of suffering is overwhelming,” Monica de Castellarnau of Doctors Without 
Borders said in a statement.

Benjamin Abe—a native Ugandan, an Acholi and an anthropologist at North Seattle 
Community College—said he was horrified by his recent visit to a displaced 
persons camp near Gulu. “It was inhumane, basically a concentration camp,” he 
said when we met last November in Kampala.

Compared with the open countryside where LRA terrorists may remain at large, 
the government camps are a refuge, but people in the camps say they, too, are 
preyed upon, as I learned during an unauthorized visit to campAwer, 13 miles 
from Gulu. Awer nudged the roadside, a gigantic huddle of thousands of small 
conical family huts. The air was sour with the smell of unwashed bodies, poor 
sanitation and sickness. Men slouched in the shade of their huts or played 
endless games of cards. Children squatted on bare earth in mud-hut classrooms, 
with neither pencils nor books. Exhausted-looking women cooked meager meals of 
maize or swept the dust from family hearths.

About 50 men and women gathered around me. Many of the men bore scars—on their 
legs, arms and head—that they said came from torture by government soldiers. 
Grace, who said she is in her 30s but looked 20 years older, told me that a 
Ugandan government soldier raped her at gunpoint three years ago as she was 
returning to the camp after taking her child to the hospital. “It’s very common 
for soldiers to rape women in the camp,” she added. Her attacker had since died 
of AIDS, she said. She didn’t know if she had the virus that causes the disease.

The U.N.’s Hanawalt said that young women in the camp avoid going to the 
latrines at night out of fear of being raped by government soldiers or other 
men. One camp leader told me that the AIDS rate in the camp was double that in 
the rest of Uganda.

In 2000, Museveni, to draw the rebels (and their captives) out of the bush, 
began offering amnesty to all LRA members, and some have taken advantage of the 
offer, though not Kony. Then, in January 2004, the president complicated the 
amnesty offer by also inviting the International Criminal Court into Uganda to 
prosecute LRA leaders for war crimes. The human rights group Amnesty 
International supports the move to prosecute Kony and other LRA leaders.

But Anglican bishop Macleord Baker Ochola, vice chairman of the Acholi 
Religious Leaders Peace Initiative, opposes prosecution. He says it would ruin 
any chance for a peaceful resolution and would amount to a double standard 
unless government soldiers were also prosecuted for their crimes, including, he 
said, the rape and murder of civilians. Ochola argues for granting LRA members 
amnesty, even though he says an LRA land mine killed his wife and LRA rebels 
raped his daughter, who later committed suicide.

Many aid workers advocate a peaceful settlement. “There is no military solution 
to the violence and insurgency in the north,” the U.N.’s Egeland wrote last 
fall. One drawback of a military approach, critics say, is the high casualty 
rate among LRA captives. Relief workers have condemned the army’s use of 
helicopter gunships to fight LRA units because women and children are killed 
along with the rebel soldiers. The Ugandan Army defends the practice. “The LRA 
train their women and children to use rifles and even rocket-propelled 
grenades, and so we shoot them before they shoot us,” Maj. Shaban Bantariza, 
the army spokesman, told me.

This past November, Museveni declared a limited ceasefire zone in northern 
Uganda between the government and LRA forces. In late December, internal 
affairs minister Ruhakana Rugunda and former government minister Betty Bigombe 
led a group, including Odama and U.N. representatives, that met with LRA 
leaders near the Sudan border to discuss signing a peace agreement by the end 
of the year. But the talks broke down at the last minute, reportedly after the 
government declined the LRA’s request for more time. President Museveni, 
speaking at a peace concert in Gulu on New Year’s Day, said the cease-fire had 
expired and vowed that the army would “hunt for the LRA leaders, especially 
Joseph Kony . . . and kill them from wherever they are if they don’t come out.” 
He also said: “We have been slow in ending this long war,” although, he added, 
4,000 child captives had been rescued since August 2003.

At a holding center run by a Catholic relief organization in the northern 
Uganda town of Pader, ten young mothers and their babies were preparing to go 
home. They’d flown there from Gulu in a UNICEF-chartered plane. Among the young 
women was Beatrice, and as soon as she walked into the building a teenage girl 
rushed up to her. “You’re alive!” the girl screamed, high-fiving Beatrice.

“We were best friends in the bush,” Beatrice told me. “She thought I’d been 
killed by the gunships.”

Such reunions are typically happy affairs, but formerly abducted children face 
a grim future. “They’ll need counseling for years,” Akongo said, adding there’s 
little or no chance of their getting any.

One day at the Children of War Rehabilitation Center in Gulu, I saw Yakobo 
Ogwang throw his hands in the air with pure glee as he ran to his 13-year-old 
daughter, Steler, seeing her for the first time since the LRA abducted her two 
years before. “I thought she was dead,” he said in a shaking voice. “I’ve not 
slept since we learned she’d returned.” The girl’s mother, Jerodina, pulled 
Steler’s head to her bosom and sobbed. Steler stared silently at the ground.

 

Stay in the forum for Series One hundred and nineteen on the way   ------>

EM

On the 49th Parallel          

                 Thé Mulindwas Communication Group
"With Yoweri Museveni, Ssabassajja and Dr. Kiiza Besigye, Uganda is in anarchy"
                    Kuungana Mulindwa Mawasiliano Kikundi
"Pamoja na Yoweri Museveni, Ssabassajja na Dk. Kiiza Besigye, Uganda ni katika 
machafuko" 

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