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Uganda's Conflict Largely Ignored by West as Thousands Die (jihadis on the warpath)
voanews.com ^ | 2MAR06 | Raymond Thibodeaux

Posted on 03/02/2006 8:18:04 PM PST by vwunpimsmyride

Many of the nearly two million people displaced by northern Uganda's long-running conflict were set to return home after the country's presidential election, if President Yoweri Museveni was defeated. He won. Now, many in northern Uganda are bracing for another five years of suffering.

Aid agencies say as many as 100,000 people have died, and nearly a 1,000 more die every week, mainly from conflict-related hunger and lack of medicine. Nearly two million people have been displaced at the hands of a shadowy militia with ties to Sudan's Arab-led government. It sounds like western Sudan's Darfur conflict, but it's not. This is northern Uganda, where suffering from a 20-year insurgency has attracted little international media attention.

President Museveni has won international acclaim and financial aid from Western governments for tackling the country's rampant HIV and AIDS problem, and returning stability to a country devastated by two decades of brutal repression by former dictators Idi Amin and Milton Obote.

Father Carlos Rodriguez, a Spaniard, who has lived in northern Uganda for 20 years, helps to lead a network of religious groups in the region, the Religious Leaders Peace Initiative.

"Our conflict is taking place in an area where there are no economic or commercial interests. We also have a situation where the government of Uganda, Museveni's government, was always presented as a success story in Africa. So, for many, many years, this conflict was always minimized," Father Rodriguez said. "I think, these are some of the reasons why the conflict has not featured high in the international press, or international forums, like the United Nations."

A rebel group, known as the Lord's Resistance Army, or LRA, has terrorized this region of northern Uganda, raiding villages and committing atrocities that rank them among the world's most brutal and most feared fighters. They have kidnapped tens of thousands of children, turning them into sex slaves, porters and child soldiers.

They have spread fear across the region. The United Nations estimates they have killed as many as 100,000 people. About 1.7 million people, fearing attacks, have abandoned their farms and villages for the relative safety of camps in larger cities, such as Gulu, about 350 kilometers north of Kampala, Uganda's capital.

The LRA wants to topple Mr. Museveni's government for marginalizing the Acholi ethnic group in northern Uganda, the ethnic group from which the LRA draws its top-ranking commanders. They also want to install a government based on the biblical Ten Commandments.

Until 2002, the LRA received money and high-tech weaponry from Sudan's Arab-dominated government, mainly to carry out attacks against the Sudanese People's Liberation Army, southern Sudan's largest rebel group, which was backed by Mr. Museveni's government.

Observers say Mr. Museveni has either ignored or downplayed the seriousness of the conflict in northern Uganda, a poor region where Mr. Museveni has had very little support. But during the most recent election campaign, Mr. Museveni promised to end the war in the north and facilitate the return of the displaced to their homes.

Philip Lutara is the regional director for Concerned Parents, a Ugandan non-governmental organization helping parents find kidnapped or missing children in northern Uganda.

In addition to putting an end to the war, he says, Mr. Museveni should help rebuild the north, an area largely ignored by the government in Kampala.

"It's the LRA terrorizing the people, but the condition under which the government is protecting everybody is one, which is alarming everybody. How do you expect a family of eight people to share one hut? How do you expect a whole generation to live in that squalid condition for a decade? We are now closing in on a decade. What economic base do we have now? What economic activities can we carry out now?" asked Lutara.

For many, it's as if Uganda were two countries: the prosperous south, with its shiny shopping malls, luxury hotels and growing middle class, and the war-ravaged north, with its ghost villages and squalid camps for the displaced.

In Uganda's February election, most people in this northern region voted for Mr. Museveni's challenger, Kizza Besigye. A Besigye win, they say, would have automatically ended the war by eliminating the LRA's main reason for being, paving the way for them to return home.

But with Mr. Museveni extending his 20-year rule for another five-year term, people here are skeptical of Mr. Museveni's campaign promise to end the war.

Most people here believe this is a war Mr. Museveni is not in a hurry to win, especially because the people most affected are the Acholi, many of whom served in the armies of Amin and Obote, both of whom were overthrown by Mr. Museveni. Father Rodriguez says the Acholi see the lingering conflict, and the government's weak response, as a form of punishment for their opposition to Mr. Museveni.

"More than 95 percent of people here in Acholi would definitely support that point of view," added Father Rodriguez. "The best thing that Mr. Museveni could do is to prove people here wrong. Mr. Museveni has just won the election. He's now [in] for a new term in office. He did promise very strongly during his campaign that he's going to finish up this business to pacify the north, to make it possible for displaced people to go back home. So that, after a few months, people may be able to say, 'We were mistaken.'"

Until then, many northern Ugandans are trapped between two hard choices: returning to their outlying villages that are still vulnerable to rebel attacks, or remaining in the relative safety of camps, which are crowded and poorly protected and where they rely on food rations from the few aid agencies operating in the region.


TOPICS: Culture/Society; Foreign Affairs
KEYWORDS: acholi; africa; aliceauma; alicelakwena; christian; christianity; holyspiritmovement; islam; jihad; jihadi; josephkony; kony2012; muslim; sudan; tencommandments; terrorism; uganda
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Religion of Peace demonstrating just how peaceful they truly are.
1 posted on 03/02/2006 8:18:05 PM PST by vwunpimsmyride
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To: vwunpimsmyride

It is stunning to me how this gets ignored by our media.


2 posted on 03/02/2006 8:20:45 PM PST by satchmodog9 (Most people stand on the tracks and never even hear the train coming)
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To: vwunpimsmyride

Bomb Khartoum.


3 posted on 03/02/2006 8:25:33 PM PST by Uncle Miltie (The Prophet Muhammed, Piss Be Upon Him)
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To: satchmodog9
It is stunning to me how this gets ignored by our media.

I'm stunned that you're stunned.

And, if Kofi is not stunned, then perhaps nobody should be stunned.

4 posted on 03/02/2006 8:27:27 PM PST by sinkspur
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To: vwunpimsmyride
Religion of Peace demonstrating just how peaceful they truly are.

Did you actually read the article you posted?

5 posted on 03/02/2006 8:29:11 PM PST by Strategerist
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To: Strategerist

Yes. I said that with sarcasm. I should have noted it.


6 posted on 03/02/2006 8:31:14 PM PST by vwunpimsmyride
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To: vwunpimsmyride
Yes. I said that with sarcasm. I should have noted it.

Wow...that's deep sarcasm :-). Never crossed my mind it would have been.

The Lord's Resistance Army is probably the weirdest cast of evil characters I've seen since the Aum Shinryko cult.

7 posted on 03/02/2006 8:33:40 PM PST by Strategerist
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To: satchmodog9

At work I manage a guy from Uganda...we discussed the presidential election there last week...it was a very interesting conversation..he said there was a lot of concern and sounds like what he thought might happen is...sad sitaution.


8 posted on 03/02/2006 8:35:39 PM PST by phatus maximus (John 6:29...Learn it, love it, live it...)
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To: Strategerist

Just replace "Lord" with "Allah."


9 posted on 03/02/2006 8:38:11 PM PST by vwunpimsmyride
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To: vwunpimsmyride

Arab governments don't support jihads that Christians aren't committing. And the LRA is not Christian.


10 posted on 03/02/2006 8:39:13 PM PST by vwunpimsmyride
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To: vwunpimsmyride

How much money and how many lives have been thrown into the toilet called Africa?
Sort of like Haiti. If you refuse to help yourself, the hell with you.


11 posted on 03/03/2006 3:31:29 AM PST by Joe Boucher (an enemy of islam)
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To: sinkspur

Would sickened have been a better choice of words?


12 posted on 03/03/2006 5:19:42 AM PST by satchmodog9 (Most people stand on the tracks and never even hear the train coming)
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To: satchmodog9
It is stunning to me how this gets ignored by our media.

I think the media are every bit as racist as they accuse the Republicans and Bush of being. If they don't investigate a story, how is the average person to know of it (unless it suddenly occurs to us one day, "Hey, I wonder whether there's anything going on in Uganda or Sudan today, I'd better look into that"). Just like Clinton, they found the fighting in the Balkans amongst people who "look like us" more compelling than the millions being slaughtered by terrorists and thugs in Africa.

13 posted on 03/03/2006 5:27:58 AM PST by steelcurtain
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To: steelcurtain

You are correct. I find it disturbing that the left wants say we only want democracy for those nations with oil. They seem to love cherry picking who should be free. European TV covers this all the time. Most of their coverage is of dead Ugandans and UN people standing around scratching their testicles. We get fed this crap about how one party in our government is evil while the press neglects the true evil around the world. There are real human rights violations going on in Africa and the Arab world. Libs seem to think nothing of these because they are too concerned with illegals being shipped back to Mexico or Bush listening to their calls to their terrorist friends.


14 posted on 03/03/2006 5:40:18 AM PST by satchmodog9 (Most people stand on the tracks and never even hear the train coming)
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To: vwunpimsmyride; nuconvert; Valin; Luis Gonzalez; RS
Of course you're right. LRA isn't really a Christian group, but they claim they are -- and they'll probably kill you if you disagree. Likewise, bin Laden isn't really a Muslim, what with his murder of innocents and all, but he says he is and the Nuke Mecca crowd believes him and wants to continue his work of mudering innocents.
15 posted on 03/04/2006 7:52:51 AM PST by zimdog
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To: Strategerist

I meant to ping you as well


16 posted on 03/04/2006 7:59:46 AM PST by zimdog
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To: satchmodog9; sinkspur

I continue to be stunned and sickened.


17 posted on 03/04/2006 8:03:03 AM PST by demkicker (democrats and terrorists are familiar bedfellows)
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To: vwunpimsmyride

Question of demographics and desertification.

Look at a map of Africa.

As the Sahara encroaches farther and farther south, the fast breeding Muslims are pushing farther and farther south as well.

It's not going to stop tomorrow.


18 posted on 03/04/2006 8:10:24 AM PST by Philistone (Turning lead into gold...)
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To: Philistone

You are aware that the LRA is NOT a Muslim army, right?


19 posted on 03/04/2006 8:17:16 AM PST by zimdog
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To: zimdog

Yes. But the conflict is between muslims and non-muslims.

Look what is happening in Nigeria and Sudan.

Encroaching muslims eliminating (or attempting to) non-mulsims and imposing Sharia law.


20 posted on 03/04/2006 8:29:48 AM PST by Philistone (Turning lead into gold...)
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