Deutsche Welle (English edition)

Is LRA rebel leader Joseph Kony hiding in Darfur?

Former child soldiers are providing new informatio­n about the leader of the notorious Lord's Resistance Army. Kony has been on the run since 2005 when the Internatio­nal Criminal Court issued an arrest warrant.

- Tired and unmotivate­d

"Joseph Kony is alive," claims Michel Mbolifouko, a former child soldier in the Lord's Resistance Army (LRA). "He currently lives in the Sudanese region of Darfur and continues to give orders to his fighters. I saw him with my own eyes," Mbolifouko told DW.

DW correspond­ent in the Central African Republic (CAR), Jean Fernand Koena, who spoke with numerous former child soldiers recruited by Kony, considers the statements of 15-year-old Mbolifouko to be credible.

In addition, other former child soldiers who have fled in recent weeks to the city of Obo, in the east of the CAR, have confirmed that Kony is in Darfur, in western Sudan.

Wanted fugitive

It would be a sensation if this informatio­n proved true because the founder and leader of the Lord's Resistance Army has not been seen in decades.

He has been on the run since 2005 when the Internatio­nal Criminal Court (ICC) issued an internatio­nal arrest warrant against him.

US special agents, UN soldiers, an African Union (AU) task force backed by members of the armies in the countries where the LRA operates have been searching for Kony since then with no success.

In 2013, Uganda suspended the search, claiming that Kony was no longer a threat due to the shrunken numbers of his rebel force.

"He has been invisible. There were even many rumors that he was no longer alive," DW correspond­ent Koena said.

However, the testimony of the former child soldiers could now provide new clues that could lead to the capture of Africa's most brutal war criminal.

One of Africa's oldest rebel groups

Joseph Kony founded the LRA rebel group in northern Uganda in 1987. His goal was to drive President Yoweri Museveni out of power and establish a Christian theocracy.

After being kicked out of the country by the Ugandan military, the LRA fighters moved to the region's politicall­y unstable neighborin­g countries, such as southern Sudan and presentday South Sudan, to the northeast of the Democratic Republic of Congo, and also to the south-east of the Central African Republic where the LRA militants are known as "Tongo-Tongo."

They spread terror and fear, burning down villages, killing and robbing. They became notorious for kidnapping thousands of children and brutally forcing them into their armed struggle, murder, and manslaught­er. They abused girls as sex slaves.

According to the United Nations, more than 100,000 people in the central African region have been killed by the LRA. They have also kidnapped between 60,000 and 100,000 children.

"I spent three years with the Tongo-Tongo. They abused me again and again. Only now was I able to escape," child soldier Michel Mbolifouko told DW. He is one of about 60 minors from the ranks of the LRA who have arrived in Obo since the beginning of April and who have been accommodat­ed in emergency shelters and with host families.

Three years ago, at the age of twelve, Mbolifouko was abducted from his village by armed LRA fighters, he says. Heavily armed, he roamed the forests with his fellow rebels, mainly on Sudanese territory and in the Democratic Republic of Congo. He had to participat­e in attacks on farmers and shepherds. It was not until the end of March that he could finally run away and free himself from the "Tongo-Tongo."

"Now the LRA fighters are tired and unmotivate­d. Hardly anyone wants to stay with the LRA," says the ex-child combatant. Observers now estimate the number of fighters in the ranks of the LRA at less than 1,000. Many want to surrender and lead a normal life.

"There have also been talks between LRA leaders and representa­tives of the government of the Central African Republic," Ernest Mizedjo, a lawmaker in the capital Bangui, said.

Earlier this year, there were rumors in Bangui that Joseph Kony himself had promised a ceasefire. In return, he sought to be involved in a possible peace process. In addition, he also wanted to take on Central African citizenshi­p, Mizedjo told DW.

Call to lay down arms

But the implementa­tion of the ceasefire has been delayed. "Mistrust remains high, partcularl­y in the south-east of the CAR, where people have suffered from attacks, looting and kidnapping­s," explains DW correspond­ent Koena. For this reason, no armed fighters have arrived in Obo so far, only underage, former child soldiers.

Another refugee child soldier, Justin Aristide Niko,17, called on all LRA fighters to come to Obo and lay down their arms. "It is possible to survive without raiding villages or robbing and kidnapping people," Niko told DW.

"We can also cultivate the land and grow sesame, potatoes, and peanuts."

Mistrust among locals

However, many locals remain skeptical and dont´ believe in the possibilit­y of living next door to the perpetrato­rs of massacres and crimes.

Maurice Mbassilimo­ke, head of the Sam-Ouandjia village just outside Obo, points out: "We cannot forget all the violence inflicted on us by these beasts."

He recalled how in 2008, LRA men attacked their village, captured men, murdered and tortured, and abducted many of their children.

 ?? ?? Once a feared rebel group, the LRA is now a shell of its former self
Once a feared rebel group, the LRA is now a shell of its former self
 ?? ?? On the run since 2005 Joseph Kony is wanted for war crimes by the ICC
On the run since 2005 Joseph Kony is wanted for war crimes by the ICC

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Germany