Kidnapping of school girls by fundementalist rebel army

It’s good news that some of the kidnapped girls have managed to escape from these fanatical terrorists…but thousands of other children have been kidnapped by these fundementalists.

Girls escape Ugandan rebels

At least 13 girls who went missing following a rebel raid on their secondary school in Uganda have escaped from their captors. The fleeing girls ran through the bush and travelled across a lake in dugout canoes to evade the Lord’s Resistance Army (LRA) fighters. It was initially feared that up to 100 girls had been abducted by the LRA near the eastern town of Soroti on Monday night. But the BBC’s Nathan Etengu in Soroti says that only 29 were ever kidnapped. The United Nations says the rebel LRA has kidnapped more than 5,000 children in the past year alone, using them as soldiers, labourers and sex slaves. One 17-year-old student at Lwala Girls’ School who witnessed the rebel attack but managed to flee described how a group of 20 LRA rebels commanded by a woman rounded up dozens of students and tied them together with rope. She told our correspondent that one of the students who was struggling to escape had her fingers and toes cut off by the rebels.

‘Terrorists’

Survivors of the attack say some of the rebels were as young as 12. Ugandan soldiers have intensified the search for the rest of the girls. Army spokesman Major Shaban Bantariza told the BBC’s World Today programme that the raid on the Roman Catholic school near Soroti was a continuation of the rebels’ 17-year brutal resistance movement. He denied that the army had been caught unawares but said attacks such as that on the Lwala Girls Secondary School, 50 kilometres (30 miles) from Soroti could not always be stopped. “If these terrorists are just sneaking into place to abduct schoolgirls I say definitely… there is no force that can protect every school, every village, every home where you have to deploy forces,” he said. “You would need probably about two million soldiers in Uganda to do that.” Correspondents say the LRA is intensifying its campaign against the government in northern Uganda.

***The conflict with the LRA is believed to have displaced 800,000 civilians across northern Uganda. The rebels have no clear political agenda but have said they want the country governed in accordance with the Christian Ten Commandments. ***

Good topic, Malik. i was going to start a thread regarding this.

Apparently, the leader of the LRA (sorry, forgotten his name - John something) believes in implementing the Ten Commandments (or atleast his interpretation thereof). There was an international conference in Canada three years ago regarding child abductees who are subjected to work either as soldiers, labourers or sex slaves. So many pledges were made during that conference - and three years later, the fruits of those pledges are borne out by the fact that the LRA rebels kidnapped some 5000 children in Uganda last year. It's an issue that receives virtually ZERO coverage in mainstream media outlets, in North/South America and Asia as well. Who can imagine what these 12/13 year old children go through? From what i have read, there are only two rehabilitation centres in the entire country - barely sufficient to provide sufficient psychological/physical counselling to these thousands of children.

IF this was a muslim group doing this can you imagine the daily images in the newspapers and the television screens it would have been non stop day in day out!

My God these children need to be protected from this sort of nightmare. Don’t click on the link unless you are prepared to see a few horrific pictures. What has happened to this country.

Uganda’s lost innocents, Hilary Andersson, BBC, 5 July 2003

I bet the Muslim Mujahideen who must have stood up to quell this artrocity and outrage must have been portrayed as terrorists...

By the way, what faith are they again? I don't see a religion mentioned...:(

Sorry i might be wrong but i don’t think any Muslim mujahideen have stood up against these individuals. These are under-privileged, poor, black African children - no one really, Muslim or nonMuslim, gives a darn what happens to them.
Could be wrong, though, regarding this - i’m sure i can be corrected.

The leader of the LRA, Joseph Coiney, (who is rumoured to have 60 wives by the way, must be in some competition with an Arab sheikh), believes that he “has been handpicked by God to overthrow Uganda’s government and introduce the Bible’s Ten Commandments as law.” (Source).

I am a Muslim and I give a darn…I was reading the names of the officials with Muslim names who are fighting against these rebels, Salim Saleh, I think…

Which Arab sheik? Do you know of any? Might be his harem, not wives…

No i don’t know any personally (thank God for that).

Acknowledged - maybe not wives. A harem is not that great either.

The LRA, although led by this Christian, has publicly declared that it will attack Christian Missions in Uganda. You are accurate, there is the odd Muslim group or two that’s fighting against the LRA. Found this quote from one source:

Sometimes, some of these groups invariably commit atrocities of their own against innocent civilians on both sides - against nonMuslims, as well as against Muslims whom they label as ‘traitors’. Only for the sake of innocent Ugandan civilians and children, i fervently hope that is not occuring in this case.

I like it…

Are you referring to exploitation of women?

I don’t know about exploitation, but a harem is good to have…:k:
I don’t know about the legality of it though…:confused:

Sex slavery awaits Ugandan schoolgirls, Kathryn Westcott, BBC, 25 June 2003

Security forces in Uganda are again hunting for schoolgirls who have been abducted by the notoriously brutal rebel group the Lord’s Resistance Army.

If they are not found quickly, the girls’ fate will likely be that of thousands of others who have been kidnapped over the past 17 years of fighting between rebels and the government.

They will become sex slaves for militia commanders.

The Lords Resistance Army is notorious for abducting children
The LRA, which has earned a terrifying reputation for its brutality against the people of northern Uganda, has abducted an estimated 20,000 children over the years.

According to New York-based Human Rights Watch some 5,000 of them have been abducted since June 2002. In a report in March, it said the number was likely to be because of the return of the rebels to Uganda after the government intensified a military offensive against their bases in neighbouring Sudan.

Children are most vulnerable to abduction at night, when rebels raid villages, looting them for food and supplies.

Older female captives are forced to become the “wives” of senior commanders and are subjected to rape, unwanted pregnancies and the risk of sexually transmitted diseases, including HIV and Aids. The younger girls are forced into gruelling domestic work.

New males captives are forced to participate in atrocities, such as killing, maiming and intimidating the local population by burning down their homes.

The rebels have generally been most active in northern Uganda, where families live in constant fear. Tens of thousands of children, frightened that rebels may strike their homes at night, walk to urban centres for protection during the hours of dark. They are known as the “night dwellers”, youngsters who huddle in centres run by non-governmental organisations or on the streets and shop verandas and head back to their villages at dawn.

Some, say Lars Skaansar, United Nations humanitarian worker in the northern town of Gulu, walk up to eight kilometres just to find somewhere safe to sleep. “About 14,000 sleep in five centres, including a church and a bus station, every night in Gulu,” he told BBC News Online.

He estimated that another 10,000 or so sleep with relatives or on the streets and verandas. “It’s a very big problem, we need a lot of resources to look after them.”

Many children who escape the LRA or are “set free” by government forces are taken to rehabilitation centres supported by non-governmental organisations. The Gulu Support the Children Organisation (GUSCO) says they have dealt with about 4,000 former child captives since 1997. Stella Ojera, who helps run the centre, says the number of children who have managed to escape in the past year is higher than in previous years, but that is because the overall abduction rate has increased.

At the moment, nine children a day turn up at the centre, where they have just over 200 children at any one time. “Many are suffering from severe trauma and need a lot of counselling,” Ms Ojera told BBC News Online. “They have been forced to do terrible things. Many are withdrawn, others are very aggressive and others have an overwhelming need for revenge, either against their own people or the rebels.”

Most are in a weak physical state, either malnourished or exhausted and sore after walking for long distances. Some, says Ms Ojera, are in need of critical medical attention after being caught in crossfire between rebels and government forces. She says that from the centre’s experience, most of the children have spent a short period of time with the rebels. But, she says, there are those who have been with the rebels a long time and have become indoctrinated by the aims of the group’s leaders.

The LRA is led by a cruel self-declared prophet, Joseph Kony, who says his aim is to set up a government that rules according to the Biblical Ten Commandments. He is thought to have had at least 60 “wives”. One, who managed to escape last year, had been in captivity for eight years.

According to GUSCO’s Ms Ojera, girls who have been abducted find it harder to escape because they are kept in close proximity to their “husbands”, the commanders. “In our experience of the girls who do turn up to our centre,” she says, “the women tend to have had an average of three children while they are in captivity. They have been there a long time and, in some cases, their children become fighters. The LRA consider the age of seven a fighting age.”

Ms Ojera says she has little hope that peace will come to the country in the near future. “The situation just seems to be getting worse. I thought it had peaked in 1997, but now there are more and more children being abducted. And just think how many are being killed every day. If we have nine children turning up on a daily basis, how many others have been killed while trying to escape?”

The LRA is led by a cruel self-declared prophet, Joseph Kony, who says his aim is to set up a government that rules according to the Biblical Ten Commandments.

Another terrorist (mis)using the name of religion to further his violent aims.

i saw a bbc report on the rebels its sickening and terrifying
the man who is the leader of this rebels or cult rather is a mad man
he claims to speak to angels
maniac

Almost something pathetically sad about these children..marching with their hand-made banners…with their simple, eloquent hand-written messages. Today they are marching, tomorrow who will remember them.

Uganda children march for peace, BBC, 14 July 2003

Up to 20,000 school children have marched through the northern Ugandan town of Kitgum, demanding an end to rebel abductions.

The demonstration was timed to coincide with a visit to the area by the Pope’s special envoy, Archbishop Christophe Pierre. Over the weekend, the army said it had rescued about 250 people - most of them children - who had been kidnapped by the Lord’s Resistance Army rebels.

Last month, many children were abducted when their school was raided by rebels. The LRA has been fighting government forces since the late 1980s to replace President Yoweri Museveni’s secular government in a campaign marked by brutality against civilians.

"Defend us and talk peace," one placard read, while another called on the LRA to stop abductions.

One of the march organisers, Bishop Baker Ochola, told the BBC’s Focus on Africa programme that the children were addressing their message to the Ugandan Government, the LRA, the international community and “all peace-loving people in the world”.

Give us a chance to grow, learn and develop our potentials. Give us opportunities to live as ordinary chidren in other parts of the world,” the children chanted.

“We are suffering because our brothers and sisters who are in the bush are coming to us and abducting us,” said Ananna Cinerela, 12. "We cannot sleep at our homes because the rebels come and attack us.

“We feel sorry because it is our brothers who are in the bush who are participating (in the abduction) as if they are not from Uganda,” she said.

Officials say the LRA has abducted hundreds of children in northern Uganda in recent years, forcing them to fight as child soldiers if they are boys, or to become sex slaves for rebel commanders if they are girls.

there won't be any relief, freedom ro so-called liberation for these ppl as they have nothing to offer unlike iraq :-)