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NEWS STORY
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Unicef Calls for prompt return of
children in LRA captivity
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Unicef News
26 August 2007
KAMPALA, Uganda - UNICEF today urged all parties engaged in ongoing
efforts to peacefully resolve the armed conflict between the Government of
Uganda and the Lord’s Resistance Army (LRA), to ensure the immediate and safe
return home of an estimated 1,500 children and women still associated with the
LRA.
Citing progress made since the Cessation of Hostilities Agreement was signed
a year ago today, including the 29 June 2007 Agreement on Accountability and
Reconciliation, UNICEF called for a redoubling of efforts towards a timely
return of children and women.
Particularly encouraging were provisions in the 29 June Agreement to
recognize and address the special needs of children, adopt child-sensitive
approaches, and protect the dignity, privacy and security of women and girls.
This reflects a common recognition of the conflict’s impact on those children
and women, with their timely return being in their best interest, said UNICEF.
All returning children and women would receive appropriate assistance and
protection, in close collaboration with the Amnesty Commission, District Local
Governments, traditional and religious leaders, and humanitarian organizations,
said UNICEF.
“We are ready for the children and women to come home. It is time that they
come home. We will help them go back home and back to school,” said UNICEF
Representative in Uganda, Keith McKenzie. “They have been away for far too
long.”
It is expected that the majority of children and women would be returning to
their original homesteads in Uganda.
Saying that the ongoing negotiations represent a tangible opportunity to
herald a lasting peace to northern Uganda, UNICEF also called upon all
communities to receive the children and women with understanding, acceptance and
social support.
“Placing the centre of support squarely on the shoulders of the community is
essential to providing stability for those returning, and to giving back
childhood to those children,” said McKenzie. “Without positive community
support, we may easily squander the opportunity for children and young persons,
our most precious resource, to grow up in a climate of peace and tolerance.”
More than 2,000 children returning from the LRA have been served this year by
community-based income generation, peer support and other reintegration
programmes, supported by UNICEF and its partners.
Data available in District Local Government registers and records maintained
by numerous reception centres, which provide the initial family-tracing and
counseling assistance to returning children and women, indicate that up to
25,000 children (including approximately 7,500 girls) have been associated with
the LRA during the course of the decades-old conflict.
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