Friday, 20 September 2013

[wanabidii] Mwanza to Singida



Wadau

Nimetokea Arusha naelekea Mwanza

Ninadrive na nipo mwenyewe

Nimetoka Arusha kwenye saa 9 mchana ( Jana nlitoka Dar mpaka Tanga, jion nkaondoka Tanga kwenda Arusha)

Ni mara ya kwanza kuendesha kipande cha Mwanza - Singida na tofauti ya Arusha - Singida huku sionu vibao vya kuonyesha bado km ngap kuingia Mwanza

Naomba mwenye uzoefu na bara bara hii aniambie ili nikadiriw itanichukua mda gan kufika na nijuw ntaingia Nwanza saa ngap

Thanks in advance

Godfrey

GG Wananchi
Sent from my BlackBerry® smartphone on the Tigo Tanzania Network

From: Judy Miriga <jbatec@yahoo.com>
Sender: wanabidii@googlegroups.com
Date: Fri, 20 Sep 2013 08:29:04 -0700 (PDT)
To: socioeconomicforum50@gmail.com<socioeconomicforum50@gmail.com>; Change Mombasa<changemombasa2012@yahoogroups.com>; Mabadiliko<mabadilikotanzania@googlegroups.com>; Uchunguzionline<uchunguzionline@yahoogroups.com>; jaluo@jaluo.com<jaluo@jaluo.com>; wanabidii@googlegroups.com<wanabidii@googlegroups.com>; wanakenya@googlegroups.com<wanakenya@googlegroups.com>
ReplyTo: wanabidii@googlegroups.com
Subject: [wanabidii] The Achole of Uganda Face Starvation and Genocide by Museveni

 
 
Good People of the World,
 
 
While Konyi formed its Rebel Milita group from reaction of Acholi slaughter in Uganda, this happened where their land was forcefully taken away from them that led to Human Rights Crime, Violation and Abuse with atrocities and genocide committed on Acholi people by Museveni.M23 is equally an engineered conspiracy of Kagame on Congo with the help of Museveni financing to slaughter and exterminate the Congo people to extinct from Congo through invasion with illegal occupation of Congo-land where Kagame and Museveni engaged in doing business with network sharing of Special Business Interest financing the loot on illegal access with unconstitutional unlawful occupation, raping off Congo wealth with its Natural resources against Congo peoples interest and mandate.This behavior spur corruption and impunity to alarming level inside Congo and thereby influencing unwarranted Civil war under conspiracy engineering of both Museveni and Kagame which spread the same theory of human rights crimes, violation and abuse into Kenya where many people were killed and burned alive in Luo-Nyanza during 2007/8 election gone bad.It is sad that Tanzania was recently threatened for attack by Kagame headed the same direction.
 
 
It must be known that, Museveni and Kagames acts are equally destroying the fundamental basics for livelihood and survival in the Great Lakes Region of East Africa in the use of Somali Pirating, private army of Militia Al-shaabab, Al-Qaeda and partnering with Chinese invasion in East Africa where they collude with the help of Somali's Salim Saleh who is Museveni's brother.
 
 
This behavior must be put on immediate stop by the world before worse-case scenario blows out of proportion and necessary legal action taken against President Kagame of Rwanda, Museveni and China inclusively..........without which, third world war is at boiling point about to erupt because people have reached their limit from the ongoing spread of injustices with illegal act of forced Land grabbing in the Great Lakes of East Africa where the whole of Africa is in danger of re-colonization with human extinct.
 
 
Something must be done and done fast…………….and ICC Hague is the only rallying neutral International platform where fair justice shall be dispensed and the law will fairly be heard for mutual common interest of all.  This is because, big and small, all people are equal before the law and that the law must not be limited to a small man, but all people of the world who participated and financed genocide and slaughter of the poor innocent Africa must be charged and be able to compensate and pay back what they stole from the poor..........this shall be justice for all............BUT, reducing it to the local set-up, justice shall be discriminative and the whole world will never know who the real killer is.......
 
 
It is time the world must know who the enemy of human destruction is.......they are the ones spreading hate with environmental pollution and animocity amongst human race.  They are the ones who hate to pay their fair share of taxes that give Government opportunity to serve all equally........and they are the ones who obstruct Love from permiating human being to evoke instinct of human morality for sharing and caring in all aspects of preserving nature to produce what there is in store for mankind in progressive and successful good life.
 
 
Opposite of love is pain and suffering.............and this is the reason people of the world must unite to stop pain and suffering but nurture love for good living.
 
 
It is worth it good people...............!!!
 

Judy Miriga
Diaspora Spokesperson &
Executive Director for
Confederation Council Foundation for Africa
USA
 
 
 
 
 
 
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The Acholi of Uganda Face Starvation and Genocide
By Peter Okema Otika
Guest Commentator
There is a serious genocide being committed against the Acholi people of northern Uganda.
Hundreds of the Acholi are dying everyday. Children are abducted, women raped, schools closed while the population starves.
The situation is unbearable. The Acholi need your help, and they seriously need it now.
The wars in Iraq and Afghanistan have preoccupied the United States and the rest of the world so much that news about brutalities, massacres and genocide of the Acholi of northern Uganda has always been swept under the carpet.
More people are internally displaced on the African continent than in the rest of the world put together. At the end of 2003, Africa was home to an estimated 13 million of the world's 25 million Internally Displaced Persons, or IDPs. The Acholi of northern Uganda today constitute over a million of the displaced African refugees.
The surviving Acholi now number only about a million and a half. Hundreds of thousands have been massacred, maimed and displaced by their own government's troops and by rebels of the Lord's Resistance Army (LRA). Today, the impoverished Acholi people cling to existence in some of the most deplorable conditions known to human history.
Since 1986 when ragtag rebel leader Yoweri Museveni took power, the Acholi have known nothing but war, killings, maiming and abductions. In 1987 Museveni's troops were ordered to kill and plunder the Acholi in the name of searching for rebels opposed to his government.
The government in Kampala used its then National Resistance Army (NRA) to kill thousands of Acholi, shooting them on sight, burning their houses, raping the women and men, and plundered their crops and animals. Government troops blamed the Acholi for alleged rebel collaboration and punished them with inhuman brutalities.
While this was going on, Museveni barred local and international media from the region. This meant the international community would not know of his atrocities. And the international community does not yet know how brutal Museveni has been toward the Acholi.
The government stepped up its terror against the people in 1996 when it ordered all Acholi living in their homes in the villages to vacate immediately and come to concentration camps or face the consequences. Those who delayed were bombed out of their houses using military tanks and helicopters and forced to run to the camps.
At the camps, which now confine more than 500,000 people, the government troops beat up the men, arrest them as rebel suspects and rape the women including girls under the age of 15. The people have nowhere else to go and are not allowed to leave the camp since their homes have already been destroyed by the government that should have been their protector.
As if the terror by Museveni's troops were not enough on the people, the rebels of the LRA also stepped up their atrocities against innocent local Acholi people. The LRA claim that the Acholi are government collaborators who should be paid in blood.
The LRA rebels have terrorized the Acholi since 1990. They cut off the legs of the Acholi to prevent them from walking to report the LRA to the government. They cut off the arms because arms can be used to work for the government. The LRA amputates people's limbs to prevent them from working on Sunday because, they say, it violates the teaching of the Holy Bible. The rebels claim to believe in running their affairs based on the Ten Commandments.
Worse still, the rebels abduct and turn into soldiers children as young as 5-years old. Those who cannot carry heavy loads of rebel loot are brutally killed by other children using machetes and pounding sticks. This is to instill fear in the children so that they do not think of escaping back home. The United Nations estimates that the rebels have so far abducted and recruited over 20,000 children into their ranks.
Numerous non-governmental and humanitarian organizations recently wrote an Open Letter to Kofi Annan, the UN Secretary General, calling upon him to intervene in northern Uganda. The organizations, including Human Rights Watch, World Vision International, Christian Children's Fund, Catholic Relief Services, American Jewish World Service and Mennonite Central Committee, implored Annan to rescue the Acholi by appointing a special UN Representative to the region. To no one's surprise, the UN has been reluctant to focus seriously on the issue, and is treating the plight of the Acholi in much the same way as it did Rwanda during the genocide in which 800,000 Tutsi and moderate Hutu are believed to have been massacred.
"We, the undersigned non-governmental organizations working in international humanitarian and development assistance, human rights, and conflict resolution, write to express our strong concern about the severe and deteriorating humanitarian situation in northern Uganda caused by continued conflict between the Government of Uganda and the Lord's Resistance Army (LRA)," said the letter, dated May 7.
Numerous individuals and peace loving organizations including a local coalition known as the Acholi Religious Leaders' Peace Initiative (ARLPI), have tried to mediate to bring a peaceful end to the war, but to no avail. This is because Museveni's government has always thwarted any effort that came close to a peace deal, by bombing rebel positions or pulling out the government's peace team. Time after time, negotiations have been set back to square one.
The Acholi people still believe that someone, somewhere is willing to save them from two decades of terror. Sons and daughters of the Acholi are scattered all over the world, among them university deans, medical doctors, lawyers, pilots, engineers and members of the armed forces of the United States and European countries. They expect that the citizens and leaders of these nations will rally behind them to save the Acholi people back home.
Unfortunately, the United States and Britain have been the major donors and supporters of Yoweri Museveni since he came to power in 1986. The two countries have bankrolled Museveni's annual budgets and armed him to the teeth. Museveni has used these weapons to terrorize the Acholi population and scare away political opposition to his government.
It is time that the leaders of the United States and Britain rethink their support for Museveni, a leader who has failed to provide for the needs and safety of the citizens of his country. It is time they stopped financing his economic and military budgets, and call for him to be made accountable to his people. Museveni has failed to bring peace not only in Acholiland but also around the Great Lakes of Africa. American and British arms and funds have allowed Museveni to spread war and terror in Uganda, Sudan, Rwanda, Burundi and the Democratic Republic of Congo.
As you finish reading this article, remember that the Acholi have been caught between two fires – between the LRA rebels and Museveni's government troops. They are calling for your help. Go spread the news to your leaders, councilmen and women, parliamentarians, congresspersons, your priests and pastors. Save the Acholi people. It is your turn and calling to act.
Peter Okema Otika is an Acholi from northern Uganda. He is the President of the African Students Organization at the University of Pittsburgh in Pennsylvania, and may be contacted via email at poo1@pitt.edu
 
 
 
 
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Congo rules out amnesty for top M23 rebels

 
Pete Jones 6 hours ago
By Pete Jones
 
 
KINSHASA (Reuters) - Democratic Republic of Congo has ruled out granting amnesty to some 100 senior M23 rebels, it said on Thursday, leaving open the possibility that these commanders could be pursued even after peace talks are concluded.
 
 
Talks began in Uganda last week, after the army, backed by U.N. troops, scored rare military successes in August, forcing M23 into negotiations which could lead to the majority of rebels being reintegrated into the army which they deserted in 2012.
 
 
"We have a list of around 100 M23 commanders who will not be eligible for amnesty or for reintegration into the national army," government spokesman Lambert Mende told a news conference in the capital Kinshasa.
 
 
Rebels ineligible for any amnesty were those who had taken part in multiple rebellions, were on international sanctions lists or had committed war crimes and crimes against humanity, Mende told journalists.
 
 
"To reintegrate these individuals would legitimate recourse to armed violence and insurrection," Mende said. The rest of the estimated 1,700 M23 rebels would be considered on a case by case basis, he added.
 
 
M23's reaction was muted. Spokesman Amani Kabashi said the government's decision would not jeopardise the negotiations.
 
 
"The dialogues will continue," Kabasha told Reuters by telephone from M23's base in its heartland North Kivu province.
 
 
"We don't even want to reintegrate. If the talks can bring security, then we are all happy to do something else: farm, or teach, to help our population," he said.
 
 
The M23 insurgency is the latest incarnation of a Tutsi-dominated rebellion that has repeatedly tried to integrate into the Congolese army, only to withdraw. Its fighters deserted en masse 18 months ago, accusing the government of reneging on a 2009 peace deal.
U.N. investigators and the Congolese government have accused Rwanda of sponsoring the rebellion, a charge Rwanda denies.
 
 
The government stance against a blanket amnesty is supported by Mary Robinson, U.N. special envoy to the region.
 
 
"We believe that there should not be amnesty for those accused of having committed serious crimes, nor should they be integrated in the armed forces of the DRC," she said this month.
 
 
 
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Warlord Kony 'in a box,' U.S. war crimes chief says

Notorious Ugandan warlord Joseph Kony is "solidly on the run," just one step ahead of his pursuers, thanks to U.S. training for regional militaries hunting him, and an aggressive campaign that offers rewards for information leading to his arrest, a top U.S. official told Yahoo News.
"We've got him in a box," Stephen Rapp, the ambassador-at-large for war crimes and crimes against humanity, said in an exclusive interview.
Kony, who leads the Lord's Resistance Army, drew renewed global attention in 2012 when a 30-minute video about his activities went viral. He has been accused of kidnapping tens of thousands of children and training them to fight for him or forcing them into sexual slavery.
In 2005, Kony and some of his top deputies became the first people indicted for war crimes and crimes against humanity by the International Criminal Court. Most have eluded capture.
"Kony continues to operate in uncharted areas, where there are no roads, and as one Ugandan commander told me the trees are as thick as broccoli," Rapp said. And "he's not someone that goes on BBC interviews and creates a frequency that you can track."
How has the United States worked to change that? In October 2011, President Barack Obama sent 100 elite U.S. commandos to train regional government forces. And the government has offered a reward of up to $5 million for information leading to Kony's capture.
"Just in recent days" the United States has had clues that the international effort has "gotten very, very close to Kony," Rapp said Wednesday.
"We've got Kony solidly on the run, we've substantially diminished his forces, the operation is carried on in a way that protects the civilians," he told Yahoo News.
The War Crimes Rewards Program has put up posters in English, French and regional languages, dropped flyers from helicopters and broadcast messages via loudspeakers in an effort to convince populations inclined to shelter some of the world's most wanted fugitives to turn against them.
The program won a significant expansion in January 2013, broadening its mandate to cover more people accused of war crimes, crimes against humanity or genocide.
The reward amount varies, Rapp explained, depending on whether the information concerns a "big fish" or a "little fish," how much danger the informant faces and other factors.
Over the past four years, the program has paid 14 rewards, averaging $400,000 each, for information about suspects on the run from international courts for the former Yugoslavia or Rwanda, he said.
"Understand: Our reward program only pays for information leading to the arrest, transfer or conviction of the individual," Rapp said. "It doesn't pay for a dead Joseph Kony … it's not a dead-or-alive bounty. It's to have him face his accusers in court."
Rapp said his efforts to bolster international support for putting war criminals on trial take him on the road 220 days a year. "Sometimes it's almost like being a fugitive, someone that's on the run because of the law," he joked.
The ambassador at large oversees the State Department's Office of Global Criminal Justice and coordinates U.S. policy to prevent — or respond to — mass atrocities.
The ambassador works with other countries to build support for courts and "truth and reconciliation commissions" that hold accountable those responsible and work to pave the way for national unity.
Rapp was a prosecutor in Iowa in the 1990s when he watched — from Cedar Rapids — the massacres in the Balkans and the genocide in Rwanda.
He decided he needed to be part of the efforts to bring the Rwandan perpetrators to justice — and ended up winning the conviction of two news outlets that encouraged the massacre of some 800,000 ethnic Tutsis.
"If you're a prosecutor, and you're out there trying to make the world safer for families and communities, and you see the worst crimes, you want to see a response to them," he explained. "You want to see the vicious perpetrators — the people that would destroy lives, and particularly to do it in horrendous ways — you want to see those people brought to justice and you want to see those victims repaired."
The walls of Rapp's headquarters on the seventh floor of the State Department, down the hall from Secretary of State John Kerry's lavish workplace suite, have the unmistakable vibe of bureaucracy. One hallway features art prints you might see on the walls of a not-especially-imaginative college student.
But they coexist with eye-catching posters of notorious figures like Bosnian Serb Ratko Mladic, now on trial for the Srebrenica massacre of July 1995.
Some of the fugitives have a red "x" over their picture — captured. A doorway to a classified briefing space carries ominous warnings about safeguarding secrets. There are carved wooden messages of appreciation for Rapp's work as chief prosecutor for the Sierra Leone court set up to punish atrocities during that country's civil war.
One aide, whom Yahoo News spoke to but agreed not to name or show on camera, is a fugitive hunter whose office features a corkboard with pictures of fugitives, where they are thought to be hiding, and possible contacts.
So how does Rapp relax? Or does he?
"I actually find being on airplanes between visits relatively relaxing," he said with a laugh. "And watching a movie and reading a book and thinking about other things, and sitting with friends, and joking about all of the sort of humorous things that come with working with people of different societies and different places."
"I get relaxation out of spending time with the people that share this passion, and some of its successes," he said. "It's possible, even in the midst of these kinds of things, to relax, and enjoy it, and share the joy of being alive when at the same time you face the horrors of people that have had that right to life, and decent life, and safe life cut short."
 
 
 
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I keenly followed the debate in the press between President Museveni and former FDC leader Kizza Besigye, and the two leaders must be com- mended for their bloodless fight. That said, I was astonished by Museveni's misrepresentation of the role of the Acholi people in ending the LRA insurgency.
In one of his missives, Museveni wrote that ".....the much-suffering population of Northern Uganda and North-Eastern Uganda ran to IDPs because they were protected by the Army. They did not run into exile. They had confidence in the Army and they knew they were running away from terrorists. In fact, the population was blaming us for not defeating the rebels quickly."
This could not have been further from the truth. The Acholi were the first people to take up arrows against the terrorists in 1991 with the blessing of government. I want to challenge the president by re- minding him that in 1991 he directed then Minister for the Pacification of Northern Uganda, Betty Bigombe and the former RDC for Kitgum, Mr JB Ochaya (RIP), to recruit youths to protect the civilian population from LRA attacks.
The drive to recruit, what later became known as the "Atero boys", was one of the most significant aspects of the scorch-earth policy of Operation North, led by Gen David Tinyefuza (Sejusa). Up to 6,000 youths armed with arrows, spears, machetes, and sticks, were mobilized and recruited in Gulu and Kitgum. They were then let loose against the LRA (see "Kitgum forms people's battalions," New Vision, 17 May 1991).
This action sucked the entire civilian population in Acholi sub-region right into the middle of the conflict. Predictably, the rebels, saw the "Atero boys" as key to their demise and, therefore, stepped up the terror attacks against the civilians. The NRA/UPDF happily abandoned the vulnerable population, leaving them unprotected against an unprecedented wave of atrocities (see, "Kitgum rebels burn 14 in a hut," New Vision, 4 June 1991).
Then in 1994, the government accelerated the programme of recruiting the civilians for military work although this time they were labelled as "home guards." By February, 1995, up to 12,000 Acholi youth had been given two weeks' basic training, armed and absorbed into the army ( see "Scores killed as NRA hits back," Monitor, 25 January 1995).
But, like the 6,000 Atero youths be- fore them, the home guards were under- trained and under-armed; they became an easy target for the LRA. In one case, over 200 were killed in Atiak in April 1995. After routing the guards, the LRA announced: "You Acholi are now fighting us, we shall teach you a lesson you will never forget." The LRA went as far as sending a letter to Bigombe announcing that she had "brought death to the Acholi by telling the people to rise against them."
Bigombe herself encouraged the creation of the militia groups and did her best to justify the NRA's abandonment of the militia, arguing that it was the people's duty to fight the rebels. Acholi elders pleaded with both Bigombe and Gen Tinyefuza for the militia groups to be better armed, but the NRA supplied only a handful of rifles.
The reason why the NRA abandoned the militias is not clear, but many believe it was a strategic calculation influenced by the NRA's intention to eliminate any up- rising in Acholi. Others attribute the desertion to the NRA's plan to wipe out the Acholi using Joseph Kony, the LRA leader, as the excuse.
Clearly, the LRA were better-armed. They regularly overcame the militias before terrorising the civilians. The government, through Bigombe, under the directive of Museveni, continued recruiting militias, inadequately arming them and sending them to face the LRA. Clearly, the militias became a labour reserve for the UPDF. When the regular NRA/UPDF soldiers were killed, militias were often assigned their duties.
The NRA/UPDF deaths, on the other hand, were not recorded, eventually leading to the creation of ghost soldiers from which some senior officers are alleged to have pocketed money. Also, the brutal and heavy-handed manner in which Acholi civil society leadership were treated under the guise of eliminating rebel collaborators — accelerated during Operation North.
It meant that no politician, local councillor or civil society leader ever thought of listing the names of the Atero boys/home guards in any way, shape or form making accountability very difficult. To date, no body knows exactly how many children were recruited, how many perished or how many returned alive.
From June 1987 onwards, the rural Acholi not only protested the abuse and neglect that the government troops doled out, but more frequently protested the NRA's refusal to protect them from the LRA. When the NRA did act, it avoided the rebels and conducted operations against civilians in zones suspected to harbour rebel support.
According to the now defunct Financial Times of June 29, 1987, the Acholi were "like millet between two grinding stones." In the end, through a marriage of con- venience, the NRA and the LRA rebels came to what was termed by one journalist as a "peaceful coexistence," rarely engaging each other in combat or making any at- tempt to do so.
So, the president and his government are now able to manipulate facts around Atero boys/home guards/LDUs because these groups did not have any legal recognition and their recruitment was not properly documented. Yes we can say that the Acholi were the first people to take up arrows against the LRA. However, it was out of their own will and conviction, considering that Acholi elders had assured President Museveni in April 1986 that they would support his government for the sake of peace.
The writer is a human rights advocate. samuelolara@hotmail.com
 
 
 
 
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Museveni meets Acholi leaders over OPM scam

President Museveni
President Museveni
By Yasiin Mugerwa
Posted Thursday, March 21 2013 at 02:00
In Summary
Yesterday's meeting is said to have been brought forward after some MPs from northern Uganda launched a campaign to collect signatures to back their renewed call for the region to breakaway from Uganda.
President Museveni yesterday met Acholi leaders to help defuse anger over the abuse of foreign aid meant for post-war recovery efforts in northern Uganda and Karamoja.
The misuse of money meant for the donor-funded Peace, Recovery and Development Plan (PRDP), has triggered anxiety in the north at a time when people displaced by more than two-decades of insurgency in northern Uganda are trying to rebuild their lives.
Yesterday's meeting, held at the President's country home in Rwakitura, was a follow-up to a meeting Mr Museveni had with MPs from Acholi which took place at Parliament. In this meeting, the MPs complained that the President had refused to meet Acholi leaders to discuss development in their sub-region and the plight of their people.
Yesterday's meeting is said to have been brought forward after some MPs from northern Uganda launched a campaign to collect signatures to back their renewed call for the region to breakaway from Uganda and formation of an independent country called Nile State.
The meeting also came on the day the American ambassador to Uganda, Mr Scott DeLisi, said grand corruption was directly linked to the way the country is being governed.
European donors, who cut aid over the Office of the Prime Minister (OPM) scandal last year, have started reinstating it but the police investigation into the matter has been hamstrung by interference from senior government officials said to be interceding on behalf of some of the suspects.
When the theft allegations in OPM came up at the meeting held at Parliament, the President reportedly challenged the MPs to produce evidence implicating the OPM Permanent Secretary, Mr Pius Bigirimana, in the scam.
Mr Museveni is said to have maintained that Mr Bigirimana was a whistleblower, a claim the MPs reportedly described as "unfair" and "diversionary", and pledged protection to the people who report the corrupt in government agencies.
Unlike the previous meeting, the Rwakitura meeting was attended by MPs, district chairpersons and RDCs from Acholi Sub-region. The delegation was led by Aswa MP Reagan Okumu, who is also the chairman of Acholi Parliamentary Group. Sources said PRDP funds, land wrangles, poor roads in the sub-region and compensation for people who were killed and those maimed by LRA rebels were set to be discussed.
The MPs also want the government to compensate the people whose property was destroyed during the war.
"We want serious government intervention in the north," a member of the team, who requested not to be named told the Daily Monitor. "Our people have suffered because of the war and the government intervention has not been satisfactory. Instead of helping our people, OPM officials decided to [eat] the donor funds in the name of our people and the President is silent."
While the details from the Rwakitura meeting were still scanty, another legislator told this newspaper that the President was to take the Acholi leaders on a tour to appreciate modern farming techniques needed in the fight against poverty.
ymugerwa@ug.nationmedia.com
One step forward and ten steps backwards by northerners and may be by all Ugandans. And that is what has made Museveni President of Uganda for near thirty years now. Deficiency of principled men and women is the york the majority of us carry. No one is committed to improvement of life for all but each one for himself. Why travel to Rwakitura to discuss Acholi problems? Gulu or Kitgum have now ceased to be towns in Acholi; is that True?
Part of what you are claiming, was used to build the Rwakitura Palace that you are visiting and being entertained in. How does it feel to drink and dine with the leader of the gangs who have robbed the little you had? Is it not the same selfish eating first and thinking of others later making it easier to travel to Rwakitura than call Museveni to Gulu or Kitgum? 'Wacet ka neno gang pa ladit!'
Certain things are not easy to implement, but I think i may eat my own head if the "Nile Country" succeeds; deriving from who are involved and the way the idea is being sold to people of the whole North.
Olum S.
'...the President was to take the Acholi leaders on a tour to appreciate
modern farming techniques needed in the fight against poverty.'
A tyrant that has run out of tricks. Now he is recycling the same old garbage over and over again. I cannot understand why the hell anyone in their right mind would waste their precious time reporting to Rwakitura to be further humiliated by this man like this. Disgusting.
For God and Our Stomachs.
kulka
Why waste time with this man? You can only train a sapling but not a fully grown thorn acacia tree. If the donors wanted to help you they sure would know where to deliver the money. The fact that they chose to give it to Museveni knowing fully well he thinks only about himself is telling. Besides he has his people to resettle before you even appear on the radar.
Way forward is to sit down and chart a way forward without people who feel you are better off dead. Nothing new under the sun.
As if M7 is bragging or mocking the Acholi leaders that the money meant to developed you into modern farming techniques it has instead developed me, Janet, Mbabazi and Bigirimana come and see "As for you stay in your own poverty".FG&amp;MYC.
mukama nkuutu
What a leadership that is focused on frustrating its own people. this man called Museven is a born killer and a lire and he can do it in his sleep.
Wilobotek
Modern farming to rub in their noses. It beats what people go to Rwakitura to do other than to give him forum to ngwello mane.
    Avatar
    Sam Muyi
    A tour? They are compromised already. Bigirimana's wife is driving a $100,000 Mercedes Benz SEL, Mbabazi himself in comfort seat of a sate of the art Mercedes while poor MP's are on tour wiz I don't know who!
    Paul Bishanga
    Ugandans are frustrated by unfortunate Leaders who cannot differentiate between a spoon and a spade.
    The Achooli people must have shuddered at what they heard and saw coming from the Mouth of the President who is made to believe that Mr.Bigirimana is innocent together with Mbabazi and His Wife JANET MUSEVENI.
    MUSEVENI SHOULD LEARN TO BE SERIOUS WITH THE WAY HE HANDLES THE CITIZENS ESPECIALLY WHEN DEALING WITH ISSUES CONCERNING CORRUPTION IN THE COUNTRY.
    J.A. Kasukari
    He met them in Rwakitura ! Why not in Gulu , Pader or Kitgum where the people who "suffered" live ?
    GodfreySilasGarveyOlanya
    Power corrupts and absolute power corrupts absolutely. Museveni is the only African leader who wants to behave like the former USA President, George W Bush Junior. I consider it foolish for Acholi leaders to go and meet Mr Museveni on his farm at Rwakitura. Since when has it become a State House? Foolish people. If you don't take care you'll one day be taken back to your homes coffins. You should be principled men and women. Man jali dong okolo man wu ducu.
    jn kiwanuka
    I wish the President could stop describing Bigirimana as a 'whistle-blower'. May be he is, but some whistle-blowers have allegedly shared the loot with their accomplices - giving themselves the biggest portion - but fearing that they might eventually be found out, turned around and pretended to be clean by betraying their accomplices to the authorities. The law should be left to take its course.
    Guest
    I am 1000% in for; they should take the words of secession to the Great Nile State by heart and deed. M7 doesn't mean it good for us from West-Nile, Northern and Eastern Regions. Out of Juda you can't make Jesus! We can dispense with his earthly corrupted and immoral western and central Uganda – his earnest dream to create a Bantustan State, when we see in him antagonism and polarization only, with no sense of unity in all instances.
    1. In my understanding, the Kony war didn't only affect Acholi- and Karamoja- regions; it devastated part of West-Nile in Adjumani, Pakwach, Nebbi etc. not least in Teso and beyond, partly in the Eastern. Where were the stakeholders from those other affected regions in this meeting?
    2. How constitutional is this man's Rwakitura meetings? On every issue that causes him headache and diarrhea, whence he is forced with the back on the wall, he calls for Rwakitura meeting. who is footing these avoidable bills of ferrying people all the way from the North and their up-keeping, if not the poor tax payers, when public hospitals are void of drugs, the many poor roads, no clean drinking water up-country, public schools dilapidated – classes under trees, not to mention the petty and irregular salaries of doctors and teachers?
    3. Who tells M7 by showing his visitors commercial farming, these people will be automatically careered as commercial farmers and will never need the stolen donor money by his cronies in the corrupted government anymore?
    Dan Ngoro
    6 months ago0
    Simple,let M7 remain with only western Uganda which he loves most to rule
    Mr. Ngoro, Federalism is indeed a far more realistic and viable option. The suggestions of secession by the Acholi MPs I feel is only due to the feelings of utter helplessness, dismay, despair, frustration - you name it - after seeing that region turned into Uganda's very own 'Ground Zero'.
    And now that the oil factor has come into play in this region, most Acholi with good reason feel this will only hasten the land-grab chaos in their midst, as well as the runaway levels of corruption being experienced nationwide at present.
    I just feel these calls for secession (and not just from the Acholi, mind you), will grow louder if Ugandans fail to do something about this gluttonous Dictatorship that has a vice-like, death-grip on every aspect of their lives.
    For God and Our Stomachs.
    kulka Dan Ngoro
    Buganda thought Acholi were in their way. Time has proved otherwise. Cross Karuma and you are in a different country. It will take you time to see it. The current Ganda generation is not yet in position to seek other stake holder's 0pinion to parting ways. You cannot be having one leg in Museveni's kraal and another leg in Mengo. Museveni likes it that way,too.
    Museveni is doing overtime coercing those dammed confused leaders to keep them getting close to other northerners . A united "North" is not good for his empire to be. In a nutshell, the north is already out of Uganda unofficially. Frantic efforts are being made to bring them back. I hope this answers your query
    disqus_bL4AScJf66
    let those MPs stop fooling us. they have been atteending lavish PRDP work shops with fat allowances, for fuel, accomodation etc; why didnt they complain then. why now. where did they think the money was coming from
    This is great MPS we prefer break away this M7 man has no interest for the North especially for the Acholi sub region in particular.
    Mr president Acholi leaders are not there to tour the modern farm of the corrupt leaders,just tell them what plan you have for the north and assure them that you'll punish the thieves or else we break away.
    no , they should give the money that was misused to the people of Acholi, Uganda has minister of Agriculture let him to the job m7 is promising to do , m7 can not be an expert and a failed implementer , m7 to instruct and oversee the projects
    Very corrupt behaviour!!
    ------------------------------------------------------
    Donors Must Pressure Museveni to End the War in the North, International Agencies Demand
    By Linda Frommer
    Washington, DC
    The PerspectiveAtlanta, Georgia
    November 12, 2002
    The Ugandan government of President Yoweri Museveni must bring about an immediate end to the war in Northern Uganda, international relief agencies and human rights organizations are now saying in a series of reports that are for the first time bringing the 17-year war in Northern Uganda to the attention of the international community. In a report to be presented to Uganda's international donors, which have lavished aid and debt breaks on the country since Museveni came to power in 1986, aid agencies have presented the case that the "seemingly endless war" in Northern Uganda has cost the country "$1.3 billion. It [the government] must do whatever is necessary to resolve the conflict peacefully."
    For the past 17 years, the Lord's Resistance Army (LRA), led by Joseph Kony, has waged war against the Museveni government, with the primary point of attack of the LRA being Kony's community of origin: the Acholi people of the three districts of Kitgum, Gulu, and Pader. It is estimated that in the past ten years, the LRA has abducted more than 10,000 children, killing many of them and forcing others to become child-killer-soldiers or sex slaves of the LRA commanders. Within Northern Uganda, 500,000 people languish in camps for the internally displaced, without clean water, adequate food or sanitation, and without medical services. The economy of the north has been completely destroyed, and the Acholi community has been robbed of its children, its means of livelihood, and its dignity by a combination of wanton violence on the part of the LRA and the apparent incapacity of the Ugandan government to protect them.
    The report that the donors will receive in their meeting Dec. 11-13 in Kampala was produced by the Coalition of Civil Society Organisations for Peace in Northern Uganda (CSOPNU), which includes Britain's Oxfam International, Care International, the Danish Save the Children Fund, and World Vision. The report, titled "The Net Economic Cost of the Conflict in the Acholiland Subregion of Uganda," notes that
    The war in the north has:
    • Cost $367 million in defense spending.
    • Left an estimated 23, 520 people dead,
    • Displaced more than 1 million
    • Left thousands of Acholis maimed.
    • Disrupted incomes from crop production, resulting in a loss of $212 million,
    • Reduced tourism earnings for Uganda by $185 million,
    • Increased medical costs by $138 million.
    Continuing prosecution of the war militarily, will cost 10 percent of the Gross Domestic Product, according to a report by the Danish NGO MS Uganda, and the Ugandan government Oct. 21 announced a 25% cut in civilian ministries to allocate the funds that it says it needs to prosecute the war against the LRA.
    For more than a decade the Ugandan government did nothing against the LRA, except to force hundreds of thousands of people of the three districts in the north into so-called protected villages, where they lack all means of livelihood and are ravaged by disease and also be continuing attacks from the LRA. Pabbo camp, the larged IDP camp, has been attacked by the LRA 17 times in the past 24 months, leaving 44 people killed, 40 people abducted, and 774 huts burnt.
    In February of this year, based on an agreement with Sudan, where the LRA had found safe haven from 1994 to 1999, the Ugandan military was permitted to strike deep into southern Sudan against the LRA camps. The result, however, has been devastating to the Acholi community. As the LRA has been hounded in southern Sudan, it has descended with a vengeance into Northern Uganda to launch devastating acts of retribution against the Acholi community for its lack of support for the LRA war against Museveni. The attacks peaked in September and then again in the second and third week of October, when the LRA attacked Agago County in Pader district October 22 through 24, burning 50 people alive and abducting scores of children. Gulu MP Reagan Okumu reports that in the last three months, the LRA has killed 670 Acholi civilians, abducted 2,104 people, and burnt 3,139 huts, 156 vehicles, and 43 motor vehicles. "This is the highest peak I can think of in the history of child abductions in Northern Uganda," Richard Oneka of the Gulu Support the Children Organization (GUSCO) reported Oct. 31, estimating that 4,000 Acholi children have been abducted since June, when the LRA was forced southward out of Sudan.
    While the Ugandan army states that it is actively pursuing Kony forces in southern Sudan, it is not acting aggressively against the LRA in Northern Uganda. In an effort to change the view that the UPDF is not actively pursuing the LRA inside the country, the government Nov. 8 arrested three UPDF majors, a captain, and four lieutenants for allegedly failing to repulse Kony rebels when their units came under attack.
    But the pattern of the war over the last 17 years shows that the failure to respond aggressively to LRA rebels inside Uganda is not deviant UPDF behavior. In a briefing paper on Northern Uganda released at the end of October, Human Rights Watch (HRW) charged that both the LRA and the Ugandan government have increased their abuses against the civilians of Northern Uganda in recent months. "The Ugandan government has responded to the increased LRA activity by ordering on Oct. 3 tens of thousands of people to leave their villages within 48 hours and gather in towns and displacement camps. On October 6, the army started bombing the region that was to be evacuated. Local sources have reported that some civilians have died in the bombings." HRW further stated that the forced herding of Acholi civilians into camps with extremely poor conditions violates Protocol II of the Geneva Convention. "The standards of the Geneva Convention have clearly been violated by the Ugandan government," HRW stated.
    The U.S.-based Refugees International has gone a step further and called upon the Uganda government to immediately end Operation Fist and fully commit to negotiations with the LRA even possibly under the auspices of the United Nations. "The world is not aware that half a million people are displaced. This is a humanitarian crisis. There's a generation of people who have lived in IDP camps." Quoting a UN official, the RI states: "But donors don't want to portrary Uganda as another African country that is going down the drain. Because they give so much to Uganda, donors have a political motivation to make sure that it is seen as a success story." Donors should publicly call for an end to Operation Fist and pressure the government of Uganda to commit to negotiations."
    The LRA has made it known that it will not negotiate with Museveni except with the mediation of a neutral third party. Nevertheless, if the Uganda government wanted to end the war, political observers believe it could easily do so. The LRA does not seek power or territory, but guarantees of amnesty. Many former child-soldiers of the LRA have been rehabilitated and been reunited with their families and reintegrated into the community-despite their past crimes against that community. But the war has served several purposes for the Museveni government. It has politically enabled the Ugandan military to be militarily present in southern Sudan, where it can continue its support the Sudanese Peoples Liberation Army of John Garang. The war enables him to paint his political opponents with a "terrorist" brush, as Musevei has charged his primary rival in the last elections, Dr. Kizza Besigye, as working with the LRA. The war continues the decimation of the Acholi people, who were the primary base of support for the government Museveni overthrew in 1986. Even more importantly, the war functions as a point of violence that blocks Uganda's from becoming a democratic country in which organized political opposition is permitted-an eventuality Museveni fears the most.
    Acholi community elders and religious leaders have been unanimous and relentless in their pursuit of peace-coming under the attack of the Museveni government for just that reason. But as long as donors continue to tolerate the devastation of Northern Uganda at the hands of both the LRA and the UPDF, there is little chance that Museveni will enter into serious negotiations. Without direct and forceful pressure from donors, the war-and the continued genocide of the Acholi people-will continue.

    © The PerspectiveP.O. Box 450493
    Atlanta, GA 31145
    Website: www.theperspective.org
     
     
     

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