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 4 of 6)
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.
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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