“You belong to Joseph Kony”: How Dominic Ongwen and others became child
soldiers

Posted on January 24, 2017 by Ledio Cakaj

Testimony from a former child soldier of the Lord’s Resistance Army
highlights the moral and human complexity of Ongwen’s case at the ICC.

The Lord’s Resistance Army terrorised northern Uganda for several years,
but peace has returned to the region. Credit: Martin Bekkelund.

Earlier this month, one of the most morally complex cases to face the
International Criminal Court (ICC) resumed. In it, Dominic Ongwen stands
accused of crimes against humanity and war crimes committed as a commander
in the Lord’s Resistance Army (LRA).

In December 2016, Ongwen pleaded not guilty to the charges, arguing that
since he was abducted by the LRA as a child, he is a victim of the rebel
group.Ongwen is the only LRA member out of the five indicted by the ICC who
was abducted as a child. The other four reportedly joined voluntarily,
including the still-at-large Joseph Kony, who founded the LRA in the
late-1980s and is the only other surviving indictee.

The prosecution argues that Ongwen’s status as a former child abductee
should not absolve him of responsibility for alleged crimes though the
Chief Prosecutor conceded it might be a mitigating factor in his
sentencing.

The defence insist Ongwen was traumatised by the LRA and should be seen as
a victim.If accounts of other former LRA members can act as a guide,
entrance into the group would certainly have had a profound effect on
Ongwen. His abduction and daily existence in the LRA would have been
characterised by extreme violence, both targeted at him and forcing him to
target others, all in ways specifically designed to recondition him into a
loyal fighter.

This is clear from the following vivid testimony of Okello, another LRA
fighter who was also abducted as a child in early days of the brutal rebel
group. His traumatic story reflects the experiences of many children
forcibly conscripted. Without providing any answers, it highlights the
complexity of the questions around responsibility and blame raised by
Ongwen’s case.

It is excerpted from my 2016 book, When The Walking Defeats You: One Man’s
Journey as Joseph Kony’s Bodyguard.

Okello’s story

Okello started to talk about his life, as people usually did around the
fire in LRA camps, following the Acholi tradition known as wang oo. Okello
started his speech by lamenting the fact that he had no family of his own
left, and that the LRA government was now his family, and Joseph Kony his
father.“My own father died when I was born, or that is what my mother told
me. I had an older brother named Paul. People said he was crazy but Paul
was not crazy, I knew him well. Paul had a sickness that made it difficult
for him to understand others, but he was nice and always helped my mother
and me. We lived in Minakulu, by the big road that links Gulu with
Kampala.The holies [LRA fighters] came to our village in 2003 when I was
thirteen. It was early in the morning but it was still dark outside. Kidega
was the commander, I know him well now. They kicked our door and grabbed us
while we slept.One of the youngus [child soldiers] held a razor blade to my
neck and told me to go out. Someone grabbed mother and Paul. Paul was only
sixteen, but he was tall and strong. He refused to be dragged and ran
towards mother, who was being whipped by Kidega. She was too scared and
confused to sit on the floor like Kidega asked her.Kidega’s guard yelled at
Paul to drop on the floor but Paul did not understand. He tried to help our
mother so Kidega’s guard shot him in the stomach. Then they all beat Paul
in front of us and let him bleed to death. We saw him die slowly, his blood
just poured until he dried out, like a sheep being prepared for cooking.
Kidega said mother was stupid for not controlling Paul, who now was dead
because of her. ‘You are a bad woman,’ he said, and slit her
throat.’”Okello continued, his voice quivering when mentioning his
mother.“I was scared. When I saw Paul and my mother dead on the ground
covered in blood, I could not move my hands or feet. It was like an evil
spirit pinned me down. I was sure I was going to die and I wanted to.
Kidega pointed his knife at my head and said, ‘You are now with the LRA,
forget your family.’ The others pulled me up as I could not stand up and
tied me with other children from Minakulu, also taken that night. We walked
for hours until we reached the bush. I did not think I would live.But these
people here teach you to be strong. You have no choice but to obey and be
strong or to die weak. The day after I was taken as we walked towards
Kitgum, one kid called Olweny, whom I knew very well because we played
‘nine-stones’ together, tried to escape but they caught him and brought him
back to where we stopped. Kidega then ordered all abducted children from
Minakulu, thirteen of us, to pick up sticks and beat Olweny to death.We
were all in a circle around Olweny, who was really scared. He was small
bodied and young, maybe eleven years old. He asked us not to kill him and
started crying. Kidega made fun of him because Olweny pissed his pants.
Kidega said, ‘If you don’t kill him, we will kill you.’I picked my stick
and hit him in the face, then everyone else hit him many times until he
stopped moving and his brain came out of his head. I felt bad but I knew I
had become a man then, a soldier.Kidega told us to throw Olweny’s body in
the bush, warning us that anyone who tried to escape would suffer the same
fate. ‘You are now real soldiers of the Lord,’ Kidega said, ‘and you belong
to Joseph Kony, our father.’This is how I ended up here. This is now my
family because God wanted me to be Kony’s child.”

Ledio Cakaj is the author of When The Walking Defeats You: One Man’s
Journey as Joseph Kony’s Bodyguard (Zed books, 2016).

-- 
To post to this group, send email to [email protected]
To unsubscribe from this group, send email to 
[email protected]
Visit this group at https://groups.google.com/d/forum/southsudankob
View this message at 
https://groups.google.com/d/msg/southsudankob/topic-id/message-id
For more options, visit https://groups.google.com/d/optout
--- 
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups 
"South Sudan Info - The Kob" group.
To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email 
to [email protected].
To post to this group, send email to [email protected].
Visit this group at https://groups.google.com/group/SouthSudanKob.
To view this discussion on the web visit 
https://groups.google.com/d/msgid/SouthSudanKob/CAJb14ooimyMxZ%2BjBemUVs%2B2Gz_3sL48fRz9P50ZLGnacq8oCcw%40mail.gmail.com.
For more options, visit https://groups.google.com/d/optout.

Reply via email to