UPDF soldiers secure the Juba International Airport on January 24, 2014. Photo/Defense Press Unit.
By JULIUS BARIGABA The EastAfrican
In Summary
- Uganda’s experience of intervening in conflict situations around the region over the years is said to have led to the building of the centre, with South Sudan becoming the first recipient of troops off the centre’s conveyor belt.
- For a force that is now officially involved in three conflicts around the Great Lakes region, the ability to sustain this engagement in different war theatres separated by thousands of kilometres and still maintain a good reserve, is the result of systematic capacity building that the UPDF has undertaken over the years.
One reason Uganda was able to despatch an
intervention force to South Sudan so quickly is the fact that the former
is the only country in the region to have set up a rapid response
centre.
South Sudan’s ruling party, the Sudanese People’s
Liberation Movement/Army, has split into two factions fighting for
control of the world’s youngest nation.
Uganda’s experience of intervening in conflict
situations around the region over the years is said to have led to the
building of the centre, with South Sudan becoming the first recipient of
troops off the centre’s conveyor belt.
READ: Uganda soldiers fighting other countries’ wars
Uganda People’s Defence Forces chief political commissar Col Felix Kulayigye said the centre aims to get soldiers ready for intervention in regional conflicts as soon as possible, as was the case when Kampala deployed in South Sudan on December 19, 2013, only four days after the start of the conflict.
Uganda People’s Defence Forces chief political commissar Col Felix Kulayigye said the centre aims to get soldiers ready for intervention in regional conflicts as soon as possible, as was the case when Kampala deployed in South Sudan on December 19, 2013, only four days after the start of the conflict.
“In a few days, we were on the ground to secure
Juba airport and everybody else benefited from that deployment. That
capability is what Africa has been lacking,” he said, giving 14 days as
the maximum time within which an intervention force from the centre can
be ready to deploy.
For a force that is now officially involved in
three conflicts around the Great Lakes region, the ability to sustain
this engagement in different war theatres separated by thousands of
kilometres and still maintain a good reserve, is the result of
systematic capacity building that the UPDF has undertaken over the
years.
The UPDF has been active in Somalia since 2007 as
part of the African Union Mission to Somalia (Amisom), as well as the
anti-Lord’s Resistance Army operation in the Central African Republic
since 2011.
Secret numbers
The army leadership has kept the number of UPDF
troops deployed in South Sudan secret, but it is understood that a total
of 15,000 soldiers are serving in its military operations around the
region.
Even then, the Ugandan army retains a reserve to contain security threats domestically, army sources said.
A decade ago, President Yoweri Museveni set out to
equip the military to act as a domestic and external security buffer,
saying that Uganda had the capacity to raise a fighting force of 1.5
million to defend the country, judging by the numbers of active service
men and women in the army, reserve force and the population of fighting
age — between 18 and 49 years.
In addition, the Ugandan leader expressed
frustration with the international community that took forever to
mobilise troops to intervene in Africa’s conflict hotspots or deploy
peacekeeping missions there.
UPDF generals said Uganda took matters into its
own hands because the African Union and the regional bloc
Inter-Governmental Authority on Development were “dithering” on South
Sudan.
Igad’s Security Council only approved a
5,500-strong military intervention force on January 22 — more than a
month after the conflict had started.
The UPDF boss, Gen Edward Katumba Wamala, said
Uganda was best placed to deploy in a timely manner in South Sudan
because of proximity and its capacity to get boots on the ground with
the requisite logistics and hardware from the rapid response centre — a
deployment he insists prevented the fighting from turning into a 1994
Rwanda-type genocide.
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