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 5 of 6)
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.
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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