Members of the LRA when their leader Joseph Kony met with a delegation
of Ugandan officials and representatives from non-governmental
organisations in 2006.FILE
By JULIUS BARIGABA, The EastAfrican
In Summary
- Joseph Kony's demands have an all too familiar echo, raising fears that the reported offer to surrender could be his latest charade.
The world was last Wednesday gripped by a new
sense of anticipation when the BBC reported that the government of the
Central African Republic had been in contact with Lord’s Resistance Army
leader Joseph Kony, with a view to the latter’s surrender.
This could end 25 years of rebellion in which Kony
has turned northern Uganda, parts of Democratic Republic of Congo,
South Sudan, Sudan and Central African Republic into a theatre for one
of the Great Lakes region’s most brutal conflicts.
However, it has emerged that the reported
proposition by Lord’s Resistance Army leader Joseph Kony to surrender
could be far from real, but it still points at fault lines that are
becoming more pronounced in the rebel force’s camp.
The EastAfrican has learnt that there has
been no contact between the CAR government and the evasive Kony.
However, talk of his surrender was triggered by contact between the CAR
government and a small group of LRA fighters a few days ago.
“What we know is that one group of LRA fighters,
between four and 15, mostly of mid-level ranks and one senior officer,
made contact with the government in Central African Republic. It’s this
group that gave the impression that Kony is under a lot of pressure and
would be willing to surrender,” said Kasper Agger, field researcher for
the US-based NGO Enough Project, which has been tracking the LRA
conflict.
This development of a small group talking of
surrendering indicates that there is growing apathy and disagreement
within LRA ranks on how the rebel force can continue to execute its
insurgency in territories distant from the Uganda government, the main
target of the LRA uprising in 1987-88. Another top LRA commander, Caesar
Acellam, surrendered with his family in CAR in May last year.
In September this year, the UN issued a statement
saying that some 1,200 LRA fighters wanted to defect, but this raised
questions of credibility, as the entire rebel force is believed to be
down to a core of 250 fighters, and another 200 auxiliary members who
include children and wives of LRA fighters.
Mr Agger argues that the credibility of Kony’s
surrender proposition of Wednesday 20 should have been accompanied by
letters or announcements from LRA spokespersons.
Indeed, other organisations like Invisible
Children and the International Crisis Group that have kept tabs on this
conflict — especially in the DRC and CAR, where it has mostly played out
since 2005 when LRA fled northern Uganda — also argue that a rebel
leader keen on surrendering, should by now have made goodwill gestures,
by starting to release women and children that the LRA has been holding
in captivity.
The UN, the 100 United States Special Forces
troops and the African Union regional task force that are hunting the
LRA are not sure of Kony’s current whereabouts after he got away in
March this year following a raid by the Ugandan contingent of the
regional task force on the LRA hideout in the Sudanese controlled Kafia
Kingi area of South Darfur.
Indeed, the US Special Forces and Uganda troops
are yet to make a decisive strike at Nzako in CAR, the location where
Kony is suspected to have fled after he was driven out of Kafia Kingi.
According to a new report by Enough Project
released on November 20, titled “Blind Spots: Gaining access to areas
where the LRA operates,” the LRA is a much weakened outfit but the
regional forces hunting it down are hampered by specific political and
logistical challenges to access the remote areas where the rebel force
operates.
But the report concludes that LRA’s surrender for
now is still a farfetched proposition unless the rebel group’s safe
havens are completely eliminated.
“Military pressure and defection programmes have
reportedly reduced the number of LRA fighters to approximately 250 and
largely pushed the group into hiding.
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