Kuwait Times

Mission unaccompli­shed: Uganda halts hunt for notorious warlord

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OBO, Central African Republic:

Sweat soaks into the bright red neckerchie­fs of the soldiers slouching to attention on a steamy parade ground deep in the inaccessib­le forests of Central African Republic (CAR). The military display marked the end of a failed years-long hunt for Joseph Kony, leader of the notorious Lord’s Resistance Army (LRA), a rebel group that has its origins in 1980s Uganda.

Arrayed against this elusive, lonely and brutal figure and his dwindling band of fighters, were a host of regional militaries supported by US special forces. And yet, as Ugandan and American troops abandon their “capture or kill” mission, Kony remains at large. The job of finding him now rests with the under-manned and poorly-trained Central African forces. Lieutenant Hubert Zinja, spokesman for Central African troops in the town of Obo-until this week the nerve centre of the USbacked, Ugandan-led hunt for Kony-insisted they were up to the job. “We are ready with what we have. We have the capacity to fight rebels,”Zinja said.

Civilians abandoned

Civilians in Obo do not share his confidence. Simeon Mbolinjbaj­be, headmaster of the local secondary school, fears the departure of the Ugandan troops (UPDF) could lead to reprisals from LRA fighters believed to be hiding in the dense bush surroundin­g the town.”When the UPDF are leaving, the people of Obo think they are abandoning them for any eventual attack because for us their presence means security,” said Mbolinjbaj­e.“We are worrying about what will come after them.”

For three decades the LRA has cut a swathe of murder, rape and abduction across central Africa, preying on civilians in four different countries. The UN estimates the LRA has slaughtere­d more than 100,000 people and abducted 60,000 children since it was establishe­d by Kony in northern Uganda in 1987. A selfstyled mystic and prophet, Kony launched his bloody rebellion to impose his own interpreta­tion of the biblical ‘Ten Commandmen­ts’. Forced out of Uganda in 2006, the LRA splintered into small units that have roamed the lawless border regions of CAR, Democratic Republic of Congo and South Sudan in the years since. —AFP

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