KAMPALA, UGANDA—The wildly successful viral video campaign to raise
global awareness of a brutal Central Africa rebel leader is attracting
criticism from Ugandans, some who said Friday that the 30-minute video
misrepresents the complicated history of Africa’s longest-running
conflict.
The
campaign by the advocacy group Invisible Children to make militia
leader Joseph Kony a household name has received enormous attention on
YouTube and other Internet sites this week.
But
critics here said the video glosses over a complicated history that
made it possible for Kony to rise to the notoriety he has today. They
also lamented that the video does not inform viewers that Kony
originally was waging war against Uganda’s army, whose human rights
record has been condemned as brutal by independent observers.
“There is no historical context. It’s
more like a fashion thing,” said Timothy Kalyegira, a well-known social
critic in Uganda who once published a newsletter called The Uganda
Record.
Kony’s Lord’s Resistance Army began
its attacks in Uganda in the 1980s, when Kony sought to overthrow the
government. Since being pushed out of Uganda several years ago, the LRA
has terrorized villages in Congo, the Central African Republic and South
Sudan. The group takes young women into sexual slavery and forces
children to commit heinous attacks.
In the years when Kony’s men roamed
northern Uganda, the Ugandan government was often accused of failing to
do enough to capture or kill Kony, with some government investigations
showing that army officers profiteered from a protracted war.
Olara Otunnu, a former U.N. diplomat
who worked on children and armed conflict, has long accused the Ugandan
government of committing genocide in northern Uganda as it pursued Kony.
Invisible Children said in a
statement posted on its website that it does not defend any of the human
rights abuses committed by the Ugandan government.
But it said: “The only feasible and
proper way to stop Kony and protect the civilians he targets is to
co-ordinate efforts with regional governments.”
Ogenga Latigo, a politician from
northern Uganda who previously led the opposition in Uganda’s
Parliament, said Invisible Children’s perspective was too narrow to be
allowed to define the popular understanding of an insurgency that
displaced millions and in which thousands were killed or abducted.
“Theirs is a narrow perspective,” he
said of Invisible Children’s work. “They just want the war to end so
that children can go back home. That’s all.”
Latigo said that the Ugandan
government, by failing to deploy enough soldiers to prevent the LRA from
abducting children over the years, had been partly responsible for the
rebel group’s success as a recruiter of children.
“Our position was clear. We told the government, ‘There are not enough soldiers,’” he said.
Invisible Children said that in its
quest to garner wide support of a complicated issue, it tried to explain
the conflict in an easily understandable format. It said that many
nuances of a 26-year conflict are admittedly lost or overlooked in a
half-hour film.
Not everyone is critical of Invisible
Children’s campaign. Maria Burnett, a researcher on Uganda for Human
Rights Watch, said the video has helped draw attention to an issue the
rights group has long been working on.
“We hope it will be helpful,” she
said. “What it leads to remains to be seen, but the goal to bring
pressure on key leaders, to protect civilians and to apprehend LRA
leadership is important, absolutely.”
Burnett added that while the LRA
issue is important, Uganda’s military also needs to be accountable and
professional — “and there’s still a long way to go in that regard.”
Luis Moreno-Ocampo, the prosecutor of
the International Criminal Court, where Kony is wanted for war crimes,
told The Associated Press this week he thinks the attention Invisible
Children has raised is “incredible, exactly what we need.”
Kony is now thought to be hiding in
the Central African Republic, where he fled before an aerial assault on
his forested base in Congo in 2008. Ugandan officials say the LRA — with
some 200 core fighters at most — is weakened and is merely trying to
survive.
Invisible Children’s new campaign
comes five months after President Barack Obama sent 100 U.S. forces to
help regional governments eliminate Kony and his lieutenants. American
troops are now stationed in Uganda, the Central African Republic, the
Congo, and South Sudan, countries where Kony’s men operate. Ugandan
officials say that, with the help of U.S. troops, the hunt for LRA
leaders has intensified in recent months.
Asked what the chances were of
eliminating the LRA, Rear Adm. Brian L. Losey, the top U.S. special
operations commander for Africa, told journalists last month: “I don’t
see failure.”
For some Ugandans, the timing of
Invisible Children’s campaign is suspicious. Nicholas Sengoba, a
political analyst, said there was something “sinister” about Invisible
Children’s campaign.
“The issue has been around for ages,”
he said. “We have to ask ourselves why suddenly there is this uproar. I
believe that these people have other motives that they are not putting
out in the open.”
Associated Press reporter Jason Straziuso in Nairobi, Kenya contributed to this report.
The case The Prosecutor v. Joseph Kony, Vincent Otti, Okot Odhiambo and Dominic Ongwen
is currently being heard before Pre-Trial Chamber II. In this case,
five warrants of arrest have been issued against [the] five top members
of the Lords Resistance Army (LRA).
Following the confirmation of the death of Mr Lukwiya, the
proceedings against him have been terminated. The four remaining
suspects are still at large.Also ‘Kony 2012’ goes viral — but what does it mean?
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