Ugandan Peace Deal: End in sight for 22 year war
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By
Ted Townsend
Impunity Watch Reporter, Africa
JUBA, Sudan – The Ugandan Government and the Lord’s
Resistance Army (LRA) Rebels signed a deal over the weekend. The deal will
include a permanent cease-fire to the twenty-two year war that killed thousands
of people and displaced another one to two million. The agreement requires one final step:
agreement on the disarmament, demobilization and re-integration of the rebel
fighters. The official cease-fire will
go into effect once the comprehensive peace deal is signed, an event most expected
to occur by next weekend. However,
negotiators such as UN envoy Joaquim Chissano see this past weekend’s events as
“the laying down of arms. . . the end of the war.”
Peace talks began in mid-2006 when the parties
signed a cessation of hostilities agreement that required both parties to stop
shooting at each other and remain with their weapons. Last week, the peace agreement talks picked
up steam when the two parties reached agreements on how to prosecute alleged
war criminals and how rehabilitation efforts in war-torn regions would
proceed. The progress made was almost
lost Friday of last week when members of the LRA stormed out of the peace talks
over demands for government positions.
The cease-fire agreement creates a temporary staging
area in the southern part of Sudan where rebels will remain prior to
demobilization. The area creates a
buffer of six miles (ten kilometers) around the area, which will be guarded by
Sudanese troops. The rebel assembly area
is on the border between Sudan and Congo, in a town called
Ri-Kwangba. The town has been used
previously in the talks as one of the two locations the rebels were to assemble
after the initial cessation was signed in 2006. However, the government contends the rebels never honored the assembly area
and roamed throughout southern Sudan causing havoc.
Further, in the agreement a provision was left for
the UN to play a policing role, assisting in compliance with the
cease-fire. This cease-fire has “raised
expectations that up to 500,000 of the (estimated) 1.3 million internally
displaced people created by 20 years of war could go home in 2008,” according
to a U.N. news released. Some refugees
have returned to the areas they were displaced from, but aid agencies expect
the cease-fire will lead to a “mass return” once finalized.
The revolt against President Yoweri Museveni, aimed at
destabilizing the government, has torn apart Northern Uganda since 1986. The LRA became infamous for their brutal
tactics and methodology, including mutilation of their victims and recruitment
of child soldiers. The Acholi people of
North Uganda have been especially hard hit, suffering from not only the rebel
attacks and recruitment but also from rape and other abuses by the military in
refugee camps.
As the talks come to a close, LRA leader Joseph Kony
is still at large. Kony claimed his
power from spiritual authority, and his rebels demanded the Ugandan
constitution be replaced with a version of the Ten Commandments. The International Criminal Court has had an outstanding
arrest warrant for Kony since 2005. The warrant charges Kony with twenty-one
counts of war crimes, including sexual enslavement, rape, directing attacks
against civilians, and forced enlisting of children to fight.
For
more information, please see:
Washington Post.com - Voting Starts in Remote Areas
- 24 February 2008 (free registration required)
International Herald Tribune - Major Step Toward
Final Peace Deal in Uganda
- 24 February 2008
CNN.com - Ugandan Peace Deal Looms as Rebels, Rulers
Sign Cease Fire
- 24 February 2008
allAfrica.com - Govt, Rebels Sign Permanent
Ceasefire Agreement in Juba - 24
February 2008
Sify.com - Uganda Signs ceasefire with rebels
- 24 February 2008
Impunity Watch - Brief: Second Breakthrough in Uganda Peace Talks this Week - 22 February 2008




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