Thing that wanna make you say hmmmmm... is did
Garang fly to Uganda in a chartered plane...but decided to fly back in Yoweri
Museveni's Helicopter? who convinced Garang that he should use
Museveni's helicopter and why? there in lays the zest of the
matter!!!
Matek
Garang Warns Kony
New
Vision (Kampala)
July 30, 2005
Posted
to the web August 1, 2005
Anne Mugisa
Kampala
Sudanese First Vice- President 1st Lt. Gen. John Garang
has given Joseph Kony and his Lord's Resistance Army (LRA) rebels an ultimatum
to to leave southern Sudan.
Until Wednesday evening, Garang was a colonel, a rank he
has held since 1983 when he deserted the Sudan army.
In an exclusive interview with the New Vision, Garang said
he was going to deal firmly with the militias operating in southern Sudan, in
order to rebuild the war- ravaged region.
"Kony won't be hiding there for long. It is not only Kony,
but also all the militias who have been operating in the area. We need to
provide peace, security and stability, so the militias including those that
were formerly supported by the government, must be disbanded."
Garang flew into the country aboard a chartered plane
yesterday for a meeting with president Yoweri Museveni. The meeting took place
at Rwakitura in Mbarara.
Garang was met at Entebbe Airport by Vice- President Prof.
Gilbert Bukenya and the Minister for Regional Cooperation, Nshimye Sebuturo.
He flew to Rwakitura aboard President Museveni's helicopter.
The former Sudanese People's Liberation Army (SPLA)
leader, who controlled southern Sudan before the peace deal with the Khartoum
Government, said the priority of his government was to resettle displaced
people and remove camps of the internally displaced people and return the
Sudanese refugees.
He said there were between three to four million Sudanese
refugees outside the country who need to be returned and resettled.
He said his government had started rebuilding the
infrastructure in the devastated region, which is home to over 12 million
people.
Garang said in the next week, the 10 Supervisors for the
10 southern Sudanese states would have taken office to oversee the building of
the infrastructure.
The infrastructure to be rebuilt includes roads and
railways in southern Sudan and those linking it with Uganda and Kenya, water
facilities and financial
institutions.