Uganda rebels massacre villagers
 
 
The army says it is weakening the rebels, but the massacres continue 
As many as 42 people have been killed in an attack by Ugandan rebels on a village in 
the north of the country. 
Fighters from the brutal Lord's Resistance Army attacked Lokodi village on Thursday 
night, hacking victims to death with machetes and clubs. 

The army says 25 people died in the village, but survivors say more were marched away 
and killed elsewhere. 

The army says it has weakened the LRA, but the killings follow another deadly attack 
just days ago. 

On Sunday, the rebels struck a camp for displaced civilians, also in the north of the 
country. 

Nearly 50 people may have been killed in that attack, says the BBC's Will Ross in 
Kampala. 

'Difficult to defend' 

In the latest attack, one report suggests rebels clashed with army troops north of 
Gulu town, about 360km (220 miles) north of the Ugandan capital Kampala, on Thursday 
evening. 

The rebels then apparently scattered, regrouping to launch their assault on Lokodi 
village, further north of Gulu, shortly before nightfall. 

  
"At least 25 were killed, eight of them children. They were hacked to death and others 
were burnt inside their houses," army spokesman Lieutenant Paddy Ankunda told AFP news 
agency. 

"The village has scattered huts, making it difficult for the army to defend it. It is 
very easy to defend a camp where people are in one location, but when people are 
scattered, it becomes very difficult," Lt Ankunda told the agency. 

Our correspondent says survivors speak of more victims being marched several 
kilometres away from the camp and later killed. They say 42 people died in total. 

War drags on 

The military has claimed significant success against the rebels in recent months and 
several large groups have given themselves up under an amnesty. 

But after 18 years of war, people living through the conflict are highly sceptical 
that a military solution can ever end the violence, says our correspondent. 

The claims of imminent success against the LRA only seem to increase the frequency and 
brutality of their attacks, he says. 

Critics of the Ugandan government's approach say not enough emphasis has been place 
don talking to the rebels, especially since the LRA is almost entirely made up of 
abducted brainwashed children. 



 



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