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Uganda: Spare the Women
And Children, UN Agency Urges
December 10, 2004 - (IRIN)
Uganda's government must do what it can to protect children and
women from violence, while the rebel Lord's Resistance Army (LRA)
must immediately and unconditionally stop abducting, killing and
exploiting Uganda's children, the UN Children's Fund (UNICEF)
said on Thursday.
"Children are being killed and raped in Uganda," UNICEF's
resident representative Martin Mugwanja said during the national
launch of the agency's State of the World's Children 2005 report,
entitled "Childhood Under Threat", in the northern town
of Gulu. "Childhood is being destroyed.
"First and foremost, I appeal to the LRA to immediately and
unconditionally stop the abduction, killing and exploitation of
children," he added. "These acts are not only unconscionable,
but are also flagrant violations of the children's right to life."
The LRA has targeted children throughout the 18-year war, forcibly
recruiting boys to fight amongst its ranks and forcing girls to
become sex slaves for its commanders. Relief agencies estimate
that up to 20,000 children have been abducted across northern
Uganda.
"Many of us were forcefully given out as wives to rebel commanders,"
Florence Adokorach, a 21-year-old mother who bore four children
during her 12 years as a rebel captive, said during the launch.
"We risked contracting sexually transmitted disease because
we did not know these people, but we had nothing to do as we feared
for our lives. This produced a high number of child mothers, but
again, we had to fight to get what to eat or what to wear."
UNICEF said that in the district of Gulu alone, an estimated 840
abducted girls returned home this year. About thirty 30 percent
had already become mothers.
"But even at home, we are faced with numerous problems,"
Adokorach added. "We have children without their fathers
and even ourselves - we have no parents."
Lili Amono, 25, who also spent
12 years in captivity, did not see a future for herself and her
child.
"I see problems ahead because we have no adult to take care
of us," she said after narrating her life in captivity and
memories of her friends who died in the bush. "We ask that
you give us more hope that the future will be bright."
Others who testified include the so-called night commuters, some
of the tens of thousands of children who leave their homes every
night fearing possible abduction or attacks by the LRA rebels.
"Girls have faced numerous sexual harassment," one female
teenager said. "We are tied of the war. We appeal to the
government and the rebels to end this war.
"Childhood implies a distinct period of life in which children
can grow in health and safety," Mugwanja noted after the
testimonies. "Childhood refers not only to an irreplaceable
time of individual human growth, but to the quality of those years.
And yet childhood in Uganda today is under threat. HIV/AIDS is
posing a lethal assault on children and childhood [in general]."
The war in northern Uganda has targeted children and has displaced
hundreds of thousands of them.
"UNICEF and its partners draw attention to the right of all
Ugandan children to live in an environment in which access to
basic health services, education, safe water, shelter and other
essential services is unhindered," the UNICEF official urged.
"Parties on both sides of the conflict must respect and fulfil
this right."
The Ugandan minister in charge of children, Felix Okot Ogong,
pledged his government's commitment to end the war and promised
that an end might even be on the horizon, referring to peace efforts
between the government and the rebels.
"We are very committed to ending this war," Ogong said.
"It should have ended yesterday, but we hope that this end
is near. Poverty levels have reduced from about 60 percent to
about 30 percent in ten years, though unfortunately, the poverty
levels in northern Uganda have, instead, gone up to around 70
percent."
From:
http://allafrica.com/stories/200412100087.html
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