guardian.co.uk,
David Smith in Johannesburg, Thursday 7 June 2012
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| Joseph Kony, leader of the Lord’s Resistance Army. Photograph: Stuart Price/AP |
The Ugandan
warlord Joseph Kony has kidnapped nearly 600 children in the past three years,
forcing boys to take "magical potions" and turning girls into sex
slaves, the UN has found.
Some of the
under-age recruits were used as fighters, human shields or spies for Kony's
Lord's Resistance Army (LRA), according to a report presented to the UN security council.
Kony has
evaded capture for nearly three decades, kidnapping thousands of children to
fill the ranks of the LRA and terrorising local populations. He achieved global
notoriety earlier this year when a US-based charity, Invisible Children,
launched the Kony 2012 viral video campaign.
On
Wednesday, Ban Ki-moon, the UN secretary general, submitted his first report to
the security council detailing the LRA's crimes against children.
Between
July 2009 and February 2012, Kony's group kidnapped at least 591 children – 268
girls and 323 boys – in the Democratic Republic of the Congo, South Sudan and
the Central African Republic (CAR), the report found.
"Children
reported that they were used in various capacities, as cooks, porters, guards,
spies or directly in hostilities as combatants or human shields," Ban
said.
"Girls
who spent a substantial period of time associated with the group reported to
have been subject to sexual slavery and exploitation, including by being
forcibly 'married' to combatants. Some children were forced to use violence,
including to kill their friends or other children in the armed group.
"Numerous
children abducted, especially boys, reported to have received so-called magical
potions from LRA leaders, which they were told would increase their physical
capacities and make it possible to trace and reabduct them if they
escaped."
Stigmatisation
remains a major challenge for survivors of sexual violence perpetrated by the
LRA, especially for girls returning with babies, Ban added. "Families that
take in such LRA victims are often accused by their community of supporting LRA
and the girls or young women escaping LRA with babies are often seen as
bringing bad luck."
The reports
cites an example from May last year in which three Congolese girls who had
escaped the LRA in South Sudan and were reunited with their families in DR
Congo, later returned to South Sudan because they were ostracised by the
community.
The LRA continues
to perpetrate grave violations against children some nine years after it was
listed in the UN's report on children and armed conflict. "LRA continues
to pose a significant threat not only to children, but also to the civilian
population at large and has forced 45,000 persons in the region to leave their
homes.
"While
the number of children killed or maimed by LRA in 2010-11 appears to have
decreased compared to previous years, the ongoing abduction and forced
recruitment of children, as well as the systematic rape and sexual exploitation
of captive girls, is egregious and unacceptable."
The long
manhunt for Kony continues. Late last year the United States deployed 100
special forces personnel as advisers to help Ugandan soldiers track Kony and
his senior commanders in dense jungle across a region spanning several
countries.
Three
countries – DR Congo, South Sudan and the CAR – are preparing to join an
African Union coalition to intensify efforts to capture Kony and hand him to
the international criminal court, which has issued a warrant for his arrest.
The UN has
said that Kony appears to be increasingly nervous as a result and is now
changing his location every few days.
A
self-styled mystic leader who at one time was bent on ruling Uganda by the Ten
Commandments, Kony and his combatants‚ "estimated to number between 200
and 500"‚ are assumed to be in the CAR, though the UN has said it has
information that Kony might have recently slipped over the porous border into
Sudan's troubled western Darfur region. Last month the Ugandan army captured Caesar Acellam Otto, one of the LRA's top military leaders, in the CAR.
A recent
report by Human Rights Watch said the LRA has increased its attacks in the CAR
since the beginning of 2012, putting civilians in affected areas in need of
urgent protection. "The increase in LRA attacks shows that the rebel group
is not a spent force and remains a serious threat to civilians," the watchdog said.

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