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
- Photographs by Paul Raffaele
- Smithsonian magazine, February 2005, Subscribe
(Page 2 of 6)
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
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Comments (8)
Its funny how life is. One never appreciate what he has until u understand what people would do to be in your condition. Want these people to know and believe there would be a better future if they accept Jesus as there Lord and Personal Saviour. He would surprise them.
Posted by Amarachi Agomuo on August 11,2010 | 06:15 PM
poor kids i wish i could adopt them alllllllllllllllllll
Posted by jamica Jackson on February 2,2009 | 03:12 PM
What is the reason Uganda is negelected from military support. The a military helped stop the masacre of Tutsis in Rowanda. Although at the beginning they too were rejected assistance and only the U.S. citizens were evacuated. It can't be because we are at war now,this has been going on now for ten years. Or is it because nothing else other than lives will be gained? God have Mercy on Uganda and on those who refuse to provide "force" support.
Posted by Konnie on June 30,2008 | 01:35 AM
I think this is a very important thing to talk about. It is tragic and people need to know about it so that everyone can be a part of stopping it.. i just came back from Uganda a week ago and learned of Gulu i can't imagine what the parents and children are going through.. Plz keep all the people in Africa in your prayers!!!
Posted by Abby on May 25,2008 | 11:17 PM
i think its really sad the LRA is doing that i cant believe how many parents must be suffering right now because their children are being torn away from them
Posted by jasmine on May 7,2008 | 09:03 PM
I think that it is sad that kids have to go through this everyday. How they are treated horribly and are killed and hurt. I wish that there was more we can do for them. I also feel sorry for the parents of the kids who get kidnapped or killed.
Posted by Hannah on May 1,2008 | 08:45 AM
African, they show the negative side of Africa, becuase thats the part that needs help
Posted by american on April 30,2008 | 09:43 AM
i really wonder why you people always show others the negative part of africa!!! it's really cruel of you!
Posted by african on April 19,2008 | 07:17 AM