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afrol News - Opinion, 10 February - Recently, Uganda's President Yoweri Museveni asked the International Criminal Court at The Hague to investigate and prosecute rebels and rebel leader Joseph Kony of the Lord's Resistance Army, LRA.
The LRA which started as a small group
after the demise of Odong Latek's Uganda People's Democratic Army
(UPDA) and Alice Lakwena's Holy Spirit Movement rebel groups in the
late 1980s has for decades been known for heartless atrocities against
innocent unarmed civilians mostly in the Acholi region of Uganda. The
rebels are known for abducting tens of thousands of children, killings
and brutalities like chopping of lips, legs and arms of innocent
civilians. The rebels' excuses for these atrocities have always been
that the civilians are betraying them by reporting their presence to
the government army and therefore deserving the atrocities.
To anyone who is unfamiliar with the war in the northern Uganda which
started way back in 1986 when Museveni had just come to power,
Museveni's quest to prosecute Kony might sound like the most brilliant
idea for a very responsible person. However, to those who have lived
through the years and experienced atrocities perpetrated by both the
rebels and the Ugandan army, the Uganda People's Defense Forces (UPDF),
Museveni is just as criminal as the Kony he trying to prosecute.
Since 1986, Museveni's army has been known to have committed some of
the worst atrocities on the ethnic Acholi people who occupy the regions
of Gulu, Kitgum and Pader. The UPDF, also formerly known as the
National Resistance Army (NRA) became infamous for burning civilians
alive in huts, killings, and the rapes of both women and men in what
the Acholi called tek gungu. Tek Gungu referred to rape of men and
women by Museveni's soldiers who would force a man or woman to kneel
down (gungu) before the rape is committed against the male or female
victim. These rape incidents have been documented by Human Rights Watch
and yet remains ignored by most so-called mainstream media. Museveni,
despite his army's atrocities remains a Western "darling."
The period 1987-1988 was the worse in the history of the Acholi and it
was also at that time that Museveni's army intensified atrocities on
the civilians. This was a period that Museveni declared a state of
emergency. He entrusted his commanders like his brother Salim Saleh and
Major General David Tinyefunza to help him do the job. Their atrocities
included the terrible forcing of Acholi civilians in a pit dug into the
earth in a place called Bur Coro. The top of the pit was then covered
with soil and grass which was then set ablaze. The civilians slowly
suffocated from the smoke. Such sadistic killers have never been
punished.
Later, the army exported such atrocities into Teso in Eastern Uganda.
In an incident which was also documented by international human rights
agencies, people were forced into a train wagon in a place called
Amakura and were suffocated. This incident is known in Uganda as the
Amakura massacre. To make it more effective and unknown to the
international community, Museveni banned media reporting on war and no
journalists were allowed to enter the war zone.
By 1990, Museveni had accomplished most of what he wanted, leaving tens
of thousands of Acholi dead and thousands languishing in Luzira prison
for alleged treason. All these are well documented and still remain
fresh in the minds of the Acholi who had trusted Museveni and thought
he would treat them as citizens of Uganda rather than his adversaries.
As if his terror was not enough, in 1996 Museveni declared a
presidential order that stipulated that all local Acholi living in
their homes in the villages be forcefully moved into concentration
camps to be surrounded by government troops ostensibly to guard them
against LRA rebels' atrocities. Where else in the world but in Africa
would the international community today stand for such gross violation
of human rights.
Museveni's troops immediately started beating up locals to run to the
camps. They burnt down crops and houses of the locals so that they
would not go back to their homes. The result was the creation of
communal homelessness for over 500,000 people who up to now, have no
permanent home, and live in some of the worse human conditions the
world. Although Museveni prefers to call the camps "Protected Camps,"
the locals who live there know it as a concentration camp in which
terror reigns and individual freedoms don't exist.
Government soldiers claiming to be guarding these camps are well known
for their atrocities on the hapless civilians. They rape the women and
have contributed to the increase in the rate of HIV/AIDs - now the
highest in that region.
These are just few recorded incidents and yet the majority remained
unreported. Similarly, the government is indiscriminately using its
Helicopter gunship and night-guided vision technology to try to spot
and kill the LRA rebels. However, the majority of the unfortunate
victims are innocent civilians.
Putting these and many other such government-sanctioned abuses side by
side with Kony's rebels' atrocities, it is clear that Museveni too
should be tried in an international criminal court for crimes against
humanity.
By jumping out first to the ICC, looking for opportunity to prosecute
Kony, Museveni is behaving like a member of a band of killers who
conspicuously breaks away and starts pointing fingers at his fellow
thugs knowing full well that he too will have to face justice. To heal
the wounds and scars of the 18-year old genocide in Acholi both Kony
and Museveni must appear before a war crimes tribunal.
* P.Okema Otika is a Columnist with The Black
Star News in New York City http://www.blackstarnews.com Otika is also
the President of African Trans-Atlantic Alliance,
http://www.africantransatlantic.org a Pittsburgh based organization
that fights for the fundamental human rights and promotes local
empowerment of African Asylees, Refugees and Immigrants in Pittsburgh,
Pennsylvania. Otika may be contacted via email at poo1@pitt.edu
By P. Okema Otika*
© afrol News - Opinion
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