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NEWS STORY
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Ugandan Rebel group allegedly still
recruiting children
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UN News Centre
25 June 2008
Although the Lord’s Resistance Army (LRA) does not seem to be
recruiting children in Uganda, women and children are still
present in its ranks, and the rebel group is allegedly
enlisting young people from neighbouring countries, according
to a United Nations
report released today.
The LRA, which has fought a civil war with the Ugandan
Government since the mid-1980s, became notorious during the
conflict for abducting as many as 25,000 children and using
them as fighters and porters. The children were often subject
to extreme violence shortly after abduction, with many girls
allocated to officers in a form of institutional rape.
“Owing to the apparent absence of LRA from Ugandan
territory, there have been no recent cases of recruitment and
use of Ugandan children, or other grave violations against
children attributable to LRA,” Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon
writes in a new report to the Security Council.
“However, children and women are still present in the LRA
ranks, and there has been no movement on their release,” he
adds.
In addition, he notes there are reports alleging that the
group has been recruiting children from southern Sudan, the
Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC) and the Central African
Republic (CAR).
In one case, three boys from the Sudan and the CAR who
escaped from the LRA reported that they had been forced to
work for the group as porters. They also reported that girls
were present in the ranks, and that they were regularly
subjected to gender-based violence, including rape.
On 23 April, authorities in Dungu in eastern DRC reported
that 13 people, including four students, were abducted from a
primary school following LRA attacks.
“These allegations are being reported while the peace talks
between LRA and the Government of Uganda are stalled, notably
because of the refusal by the LRA leader, Joseph Kony, to sign
the final peace agreement,” Mr. Ban writes.
Last July the Security Council Working Group on Children
and Armed Conflict called on the LRA to unconditionally
release children used in their ranks, and underlined the
absence of any concrete signs in this regard.
The Group also noted the International
Criminal Court indictments against five senior members of
the LRA – the leader Joseph Kony, and the commanders Vincent
Otti, Okot Odhiambo, Dominic Ongwen and Raska Lukwiya – on a
number of charges, including the enlistment of children
through abduction.
The rebel group has maintained that it had released all
children and women abducted or forcibly conscripted some time
ago and that those who remained in the bush were women and
children related to LRA members.
Mr. Ban says that this information cannot be independently
verified because of the absence of any direct contacts between
the UN and the LRA leadership.
The Secretary-General urges the LRA to provide a complete
list of names and ages of the women and children remaining in
its ranks for verification and to carry out their immediate
release.
In addition, he says the UN Task Forces on Monitoring and
Reporting in Uganda, the CAR, the DRC and the Sudan, in
cooperation with the UN missions in the DRC and Sudan, should
develop a strategy to increase monitoring and reporting on
cross-border recruitment and use of children by the LRA.
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