Surrounded: Women and Girls in Northern Uganda 

By Erin Patrick
Migration Policy Institute 
       
      Women in Northern Uganda line up to fill their containers with water 
(photo courtesy of USAID)  

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June 1, 2005 

The brutal conflict in Northern Uganda began more than 19 years ago, but has 
received little of the attention paid to other such long-running conflicts. 
While Northern Uganda's violent struggle is officially between the Lord's 
Resistance Army (LRA) rebels and the government, civilians are trapped in the 
middle. 

Each segment of the civilian population in the north faces its own horrors. 
Internally displaced men, for example, may be subjected to forced labor. Boys 
are kidnapped by the LRA and brutally indoctrinated into life as soldiers. 

Displaced women and girls are especially at risk because of the manner in which 
the war is being fought and because of vulnerabilities unique to their gender. 
Women and girls also face particular difficulties in seeking physical and legal 
protection from both sides in the conflict. 

Background 

Northern Uganda has been wracked by a brutal conflict since 1986, when the LRA 
- a mysterious insurgency led by a man named Joseph Kony, who claims god-like 
powers - began its armed campaign against the Ugandan government. 

As a movement, the LRA's founding is very loosely rooted in the ongoing power 
struggle between Northern Uganda and the more southern provinces near the 
capital, Kampala. However, the tactics of the LRA defy its occasional 
proclamation that it is fighting for the independence of the Acholi people, the 
largest ethnic group in Northern Uganda. 

The LRA attacks Acholi civilians more often than it launches campaigns against 
the Ugandan government. On the surface, the LRA's raids on Acholi villages and 
camps for the displaced restock the forces with supplies and food (the LRA 
commonly loots villages before destroying them) as well as with new soldiers - 
kidnapped children. 

The attacks serve an even more sinister purpose, as the LRA uses its raids as a 
means of exerting control over the Acholi population by creating a constant 
state of fear. Common LRA tactics used to instill such fear include mutilation 
by cutting off lips, ears, and breasts; rape and forced pregnancy; and forced 
conscription of children. 

Since mid-2002 alone, the LRA has abducted an estimated 12,000 children, who 
have then been subjected to or forced to witness - or commit - atrocities that 
compel them to remain with the LRA as fighters, porters, or "wives." 

The intensity of the conflict has fluctuated during the past two decades, with 
the most recent increase in violence occurring in the last two years. By all 
indications, the LRA is now based in the brush forests of Northern Uganda, and 
has exponentially increased its attacks and the abduction of children. 

In April 2002, there were an estimated 450,000 displaced people in Northern 
Uganda. As of mid-2004, this number had increased to an estimated 1.5 million, 
making the tiny region home to the world's third-largest population of 
internally displaced people (IDPs), behind only Sudan and Colombia. By most 
estimates, more than 90 percent of the total population of the three provinces 
that constitute Acholiland - Gulu, Kitgum, and Pader - is displaced. 

The Situation Today 

During a brutal wave of attacks by the LRA in 1996, the Ugandan government 
began a policy of forcing civilians in the north out of their homes and into 
what it termed "protected villages" - in reality, a gentler name for a network 
of IDP camps. The idea was to group civilians in more easily defensible 
locations, often surrounding existing or newly constructed army outposts, 
instead of the highly dispersed, quasi-rural settlements traditional among the 
Acholi people. 

Further, the Ugandan government hoped that with the vast majority of civilians 
no longer residing in the countryside, the army would have a freer hand to root 
the LRA out of the bush, leading to a quick military victory. 

At first, the protected villages policy could have been considered consistent 
with the UN's Guiding Principles on Internal Displacement (1998). Principles 6 
and 7, for example, allow for displacement in extreme circumstances and when 
the security of civilians so demands, but specify that it should last no longer 
than required. In addition, authorities should ensure that such displacement is 
conducted in satisfactory conditions of safety, with adverse effects minimized. 

However, nearly a decade after their establishment and wit no military victory 
in sight, it is difficult to reconcile the continued existence of the villages 
with the UN's Guiding Principles. 

By most accounts, the increased activity by the Ugandan army caused the LRA to 
become even more mobile, including establishing bases inside southern Sudan. 
Reports of LRA attacks on civilians, including those in the "villages," are 
rife, including one on Bobi camp in Gulu the evening before this author's visit 
there in November 2004. 

In the Camps 

Displaced women and girls in Northern Uganda have few places to turn for 
protection from the various entities that seek to harm them. 

For women and girls, the term "protected villages" is a misnomer for a variety 
of reasons. First of all - and not unique to Northern Uganda - women in 
prolonged camp situations are more vulnerable to abuse from male relatives or 
partners. 

In many cases, the increase in domestic violence found in refugee and IDP camps 
occurs as a result of the progressive destruction of traditional family and 
community customs and support structures; this is combined with pervasive and 
seemingly endless poverty. 

In Northern Uganda, camp environments are further strained by massive 
overcrowding (particularly problematic for a people used to living in large 
family compounds), insufficient food and services, and a near complete lack of 
any type of employment opportunities. 

Women and girls in the camps in Northern Uganda also face sexual violence and 
exploitation by the very soldiers who are supposed to protect them. In some 
cases, the design of the camps can help facilitate such abuse: they are built 
around an army base or outpost, with often thousands and sometimes tens of 
thousands of tiny thatch huts surrounding it. 

In theory, those huts closest to the army posts should be the most protected, 
with those on the outskirts the least protected. This may be true in terms of 
protection against the LRA, but soldiers have been implicated in numerous cases 
of assault and exploitation, including raping women and girls and threatening 
to harm family members if women refuse to have sex with them. 

Soldiers have also been accused of raping women at water sources and in the 
fields outside the immediate camp vicinity. They sometimes accuse them of being 
"rebel collaborators" merely for leaving the camp in search of water or 
firewood - tasks that fall almost exclusively to women and girls in most 
traditional African societies, whether they are displaced or not. The soldiers 
then threaten to expose these "collaborators" to the wider camp population 
unless the women offer sex in exchange for silence. 

Outside the Camps 

Until mid-2004, only a small number of the many IDP camps in Northern Uganda 
were "gazetted" (that is, recognized) by the Ugandan government. Several more 
camps were gazetted in September 2004, though dozens still remain unofficial. 
Since only gazetted camps are eligible to receive official humanitarian 
assistance, tens of thousands of IDPs in camps in Uganda receive little to no 
assistance. 

As a result, women often leave the immediate confines of the camps to search 
for firewood, tend small gardens, collect water, or perform other domestic 
necessities. This behavior - while often necessary for family survival - puts 
women at greater risk of abduction by the LRA. 

The precarious security situation throughout the north - especially at night, 
when the LRA is most likely to attack - has also led to a phenomenon known as 
"night commuting." Every night, as darkness falls, as many as 50,000 children 
and teenagers flee their villages and camps to larger towns up to five or more 
miles away, where they feel less vulnerable to abduction. 

In the city centers of Gulu and Kitgum, for example, the children crowd 
together on the front steps of police stations, hospital, schools, or other 
public buildings, attempt to sleep as much as they can, and then walk back home 
in the morning - only to repeat the process again the next night. Many children 
in Northern Uganda have been night commuting for three years or more. 

Though night commuters may be at less risk for abduction, regular long walks 
along pitch-black roads make these children, especially girls, vulnerable to 
other kinds of exploitation and attack. 

Unlike their male counterparts, female night commuters are often forced by 
their families to remain at home longer into the evening, in order to finish 
chores and other domestic responsibilities. Thus they often travel later at 
night, and in smaller groups, than do many boys. 

Young girls are also vulnerable to exploitation by men who know the routes 
night commuters use, and take advantage of the dire situation and relative 
immaturity of the girls walking past to convince them to trade sex for money, 
food, or other necessities. 

Lastly, the environments in which night commuters - both boys and girls - stay 
overnight are often unsupervised, leading to risky sexual behavior, sexually 
transmitted diseases, and unintended pregnancies. 

In LRA Custody 

Women and girls in LRA custody live lives of sexual exploitation and assault 
particular to their gender. Young girls kidnapped by the LRA are often forced 
to become sex slaves or so-called "wives" of rebel commanders, subject to 
forced pregnancies aimed at continually repopulating the ranks of LRA fighters. 

These girls and women are also at extremely high risk of contracting HIV, and 
the risk of disease has led LRA commanders to seek increasingly younger female 
victims, in the hope that they will be "clean." A 2004 survey by the 
non-government organization (NGO) World Vision found that the HIV/AIDS rate in 
Northern Uganda is more than twice that in the southern part of the country. 

Should women become HIV positive or otherwise no longer be of use to LRA 
commanders, they may be sent back to their villages. Readjustment to civilian 
life and the return to families and communities are not easy for any ex-LRA 
combatant, male or female. 

However, whereas boys and men who have escaped or been released from the LRA 
are often cleansed of any past atrocities they may have committed through an 
elaborate, traditional Acholi ritual, girls and women - especially those who 
have borne the children of LRA commanders - are often stigmatized and cast 
away, or choose not to return at all out of shame. 

The Legal Environment 

The Universal Declaration of Human Rights and the Convention on the Elimination 
of All Forms of Discrimination against Women (CEDAW) outline basic and 
fundamental human rights regarding gender discrimination and "security of the 
person," which has been interpreted, inter alia, in terms of sexual behavior. 

Uganda ratified CEDAW more than two decades ago, yet the overall legal 
environment in the country is still not fully protective of women and girls, 
nor does it facilitate justice for victims of sexual or gender-based violence. 

For example, sexual contact outside of marriage with girls under the age of 18 
is known in Uganda as "defilement," not rape. Though the official punishment 
for defilement is death, in practice, according to a variety of human rights 
NGOs in Uganda, "defilers" are rarely subject to any form of punishment 
stronger than a slap on the wrist. 

Especially in, but not limited to, Northern Uganda, families will often forgive 
the perpetrator (and/or not press charges) if he agrees to either marry the 
girl, pay a fine for his actions, or, preferably, both. 

In some cases, the desire on the part of a victim's family to receive 
compensation rather than seek punishment through the judicial system is 
primarily motivated by dire economic straits. In other cases, it occurs because 
the family knows they are unlikely to achieve any sort of result - legal or 
monetary - if they take their chances with the judicial system. 

Girls in displaced families are in an even more precarious situation since they 
are almost fully dependent on government and army assistance for survival, are 
generally poorer than non-displaced families, and often lack even the most 
basic education and knowledge of their rights. 

It is especially difficult for women and girls who have been assaulted by 
soldiers to come forward with their accusations. As a result, few, if any 
soldiers, are ever prosecuted - leading many to continue their actions in 
relative impunity. 

According to a variety of NGOs in Northern Uganda, as well as displaced women 
themselves, the most severe punishment a soldier implicated in rape is likely 
to receive is a transfer to a different camp. Stories abound of individual army 
soldiers and commanders that have been transferred over and over again for this 
reason, yet never brought to court. 

Moreover, victims of sexual and gender-based violence who do come forward are 
put in a harsher spotlight than the perpetrators. Uganda's highly patriarchal 
society generally views girls as a financial burden on their families who 
should be married off as soon as possible. 

In this environment, rape or other forms of sexual assault are not always 
interpreted as crimes in the first place - by anyone except the victims. 

Conclusion 

Internally displaced women and girls in Northern Uganda are surrounded by 
elements that may potentially do them harm. The LRA attacks and abducts them, 
forces them to bear children, and discards them if they fall sick or are no 
longer useful. The army - charged with protecting all civilians against LRA 
atrocities - commits egregious acts of gender-based violence. 

Women and girls are further failed by a legal system meant to be 
non-discriminatory but which, in reality, rarely results in punishment of 
perpetrators of sexually-based offenses. Perhaps cruelest of all, victims of 
gender-specific sexual violence in Northern Uganda are often spurned by their 
own families and communities. 

NOTE: 
This article is based on interviews conducted by the author with Ugandan 
government officials, UN agencies, NGOs, Ugandan human rights organizations, 
and women in Bobi IDP camp in Kampala and Gulu, Uganda, in November 2004. The 
author would like to thank Caroline Ort of the Norwegian Refugee Council-Gulu 
for her tremendous assistance and advice. 

Further Reading: 

Global IDP Project, Profile of Internal Displacement: Uganda. Updated February 
2005. Available online. 

Human Rights Watch, "Abducted and Abused: Renewed Conflict in Northern Uganda," 
Vol. 15, No. 12 (A), July 2003. Available online. 

International Crisis Group, "Northern Uganda: Understanding and Solving the 
Conflict." IGC Africa Report No. 77, April 2004. Available online. 

Zachary Lomo and Lucy Hovil, Refugee Law Project (Makerere University, 
Kampala), "Behind the Violence: Causes, Consequences and the Search for 
Solutions to the Conflict in Northern Uganda." Refugee Law Project Working 
Paper No. 11, February 2004. Available online. 

Erin Patrick, "'Unlike any other, it is a war on children': Victims of the 
Conflict in Northern Uganda." Migration Policy Institute Hot Spot, August 2004. 
Available online. 

Women's Commission on Refugee Women and Children, "No Safe Place to Call Home: 
Children and Adolescent Night Commuters in Northern Uganda." July 2004. 
Available online. 

World Vision, "Pawns of Politics: Children, Conflict and Peace in Northern 
Uganda." 2004. Available online. 

 The Mulindwas Communication Group
"With Yoweri Museveni, Uganda is in anarchy"
            Groupe de communication Mulindwas 
"avec Yoweri Museveni, l'Ouganda est dans l'anarchie"


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