Uganda: Nation in Crisis Thanks to Divisive Regime
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allAfrica.com
GUEST COLUMN
September 19, 2006
Posted to the web September 19, 2006
Olara A. Otunnu
The government of Uganda and the Lord's Resistance Army (LRA) have agreed to end two decades of hostilities in the northern part of the country. This is good news. But, only serious international pressure can ensure that the Juba talks progress into a definite peace.
The regime of Youweri Museveni has invested massively in a campaign of deception and disinformation, aimed at concealing a methodical and comprehensive genocide in northern Uganda, conceived and conducted by the government. A carefully scripted narrative is being promoted, according to which the catastrophe in northern Uganda begins with the LRA and will end with their demise.
This rewriting of history does not stand the tests of examination and evidence. Yet the relentless repetition of these myths over two decades, by the regime and its international sponsors, has invested them with the aura of truth. What are the facts?
In its duration, magnitude, and impact, the situation in northern Uganda exceeds the abominations of Darfur in Sudan. The population of northern Uganda has been rendered totally vulnerable, trapped between the brutality of the LRA and the genocide being committed by the government.
The LRA has been responsible for atrocities, including massacres, maiming and the abduction of some 25,000 children, for which its leadership must be held fully accountable. However, the LRA factor has been cynically manipulated to divert attention from and conceal the unfolding genocide.
According to the 1948 Convention, genocide is aimed at "destroying in whole or in part" the life and viability of a targeted community. This stage-by-stage multi-dimensional assault can span years of preparation and execution.
This is precisely what has been going on in northern Uganda, marked by a conspiracy of silence and cover-up. As the Ugandan writer, P. K. Mwanje, observed, "Ugandans south of the River Nile and their friends [the international community] do not know of the genocide taking place in northern Uganda".
Over the last 20 years, a population of almost 2 million, from Acoli, Lango and Teso regions, have been forced by the government into concentration camps, defined by disease and death, humiliation and despair, overcrowding and malnutrition, and appalling sanitation. It must be stressed that the majority did not flee their homes to seek refuge in government 'safe havens'.
These populations were uprooted from their homes and lands by the government, in operations marked by systematic bombing, burning, and killing. Today 95% of the Acoli population is in these camps.
After visiting the camps, reporter Elias Biryabarema wrote in Uganda's Monitor newspaper last November: "Not a single explanation on earth can justify the degradation, desolation and the horrors killing off generation after generation. Frankly, it's not entirely imprecise to describe what I saw as a slow extinction - shocking cruelty and death stalking a people by the minute, by the hour, by the day. Museveni owes these children, these women an answer: they deserved it yesterday, they do today and will tomorrow."
Consider this. According to the Ugandan army spokesman, the LRA killed 46 people over the six months ending March 2006. Meanwhile 1500 people - a thousand of them children - are dying weekly in the camps.
The camps are massively congested, with 50-70,000 people occupying one square kilometer. Women wait in line for more than 12 hours to fill a jerrycan of water; more than 4,000 people share one public latrine; approximately 50% of children have been seriously stunted from malnutrition. Access to health care is non-existent.
According to Human Rights Watch, "Women in a number of camps told how they had been raped by soldiers from the Ugandan army. It is exceptionally difficult for women to find protection from sexual abuse by government soldiers."
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Not only have the people been uprooted from their lands, but the entire mass of livestock from Acoli, Lango and Teso was forcibly confiscated by the government in 1986/87. Today there is a serious land-grab in Acoli by senior government and military officials.
This is the face of genocide. Like erstwhile regimes in Rwanda or the Balkans, the Museveni regime has stoked ethnic racism to gain and retain power, with such declarations by close associates as: "Those people' are not human beings; 'they' are biological substances...who should be eliminated"; "We shall make 'them' become like the ensenene insects; you know what happens when you trap them in a bottle and close the lid"; and "Let them go and eat grass, mangoes, and lizards."
In the 1970s, the Acoli were especially targeted by the Idi Amin regime. Amin decimated the Acoli leadership, intelligentsia, businessmen, and military officers. It was therefore unimaginable for the Acoli that they would ever experience a worse nightmare. Alas, the Museveni regime has turned out to be many times more devastating and deadly for the community.
Ochan Otim
NB: In case you are not aware, there is a petition to stop the Northern Uganda Genocide at: http://www.petitiononline.com/savacoli/petition.html
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