Untitled Document
Fanatical rebels have terrorized northern Uganda for years, enslaving and torturing
those who seek safety in squalid camps and at town facilities
A rebel group calling itself the Lord's Resistance Army says it wants to rule
the East African nation of Uganda according to the Ten Commandments. But it
thrives on abducting children to serve as soldiers and sex slaves, and mutilates
civilians. The group's conflict with government forces has received relatively
little international attention even though an estimated 30,000 children have
been kidnapped and as many as 1.6 million civilians have been displaced. A rebel
commander surrendered early this year; the government announced a temporary
cease-fire; and the end of a civil war in neighboring Sudan could undercut rebel
support. But peace talks have stalled in recent months. The fighting and misery
continue.
As dusk falls across northern Uganda, scores of children begin their nightly
trek into the centers of remote provincial towns. They sleep in doorways, on
verandas and at drafty bus stations, hospitals and schools. They are known as
"night commuters," and they make the hike from their desolate rural
homes because they are afraid.
For almost two decades, a notorious rebel group that calls itself the Lord's
Resistance Army, or LRA, has been terrorizing villagers. It kidnaps adults to
haul heavy loads over long distances. But it also steals children, some as young
as 8. The LRA forces the boys to become soldiers; the girls become sex slaves.
It also compels its victims to victimize others. Reports abound of youngsters
torturing or killing peers who had tried to escape or displeased their captors.
Hundreds of youths have shared details of their ordeals with aid workers who
have set up live-in trauma counseling centers.
The LRA is led by Joseph Kony, who claims to be acting under divine instruction.
It says it is fighting for political recognition, and it denies brutality toward
civilians. In one day last month, however, the rebels hacked at least 16 people
to death with the victims' own farming tools. The government of Ugandan President
Yoweri Museveni has tried to conduct negotiations with Kony, but there have
been no firm results. Officials say Kony is nothing more than a bandit and that
it would be out of the question to give him either amnesty or a political office.
So the cruelty persists. International aid groups estimate that 30,000 children
have been abducted in the slow-burning conflict. Although hundreds have escaped,
they rarely find peace.
Villages across northern Uganda have been uprooted. The former residents languish
in camps, which are cramped and unsanitary. Food, clean water and medical care
are scarce. Malnutrition and diseases such as malaria, scabies and tuberculosis
afflict many. Those who leave camp to look for work, firewood or edible plants
risk being attacked by the rebels, captured in shootouts or blown up by mines
that litter the landscape. The rebels often storm the camps to loot supplies
and kidnap more victims.