News

Gulu – Former LRA fighters who have since returned from the bush should apologise to the women whose rights they violated during the insurgency in northern Uganda, a meeting here has heard.

During the launch of the Women Advocacy Network (WAN) at Gulu’s Churchill Courts hotel, Evelyn Amony, who was in LRA captivity between 1994 and 2005, spoke of the pain of seeing her former tormentors moving freely yet they have never sought forgiveness.

“These men gave us children, raped and forcefully abducted us and they also made us experience pain at a very young age. Some of us are here struggling with life because of them but they don’t care about us,” Amony said.

WAN has membership of over 200 women from the Acholi sub-region, many of them carrying traumatic and physical scars of an LRA insurgency that has since migrated to DR Congo and Central African Republic. The issue of reconciliation between perpetrator and victim of war is a thorny one, complicated by the paradox that many of the former were themselves abducted by the LRA and brutalised into violent combatants.

Amony feels that formerly abducted women should also be educated or – just like many men – allowed to join the army, so that they can earn a living and support their children.

“There is unfairness between men and women; how comes the men are being integrated into the army and educated but the women are just left to suffer?” Amony said.

Lily Grace Anena, who spent seven years with the LRA, revealed that people like her found it difficult to get husbands because many parents would not allow their sons to marry a formerly abducted girl. Retired Bishop Macleod Baker Ochola urged the government to comprehensively address the challenges of formerly abducted women.

Comments

 
-2 #1 Jonathan Kalani 2012-06-01 21:30
Who can marry a girl who was abducted and put in sex slavery when there are fresh girls? There is nothing left of her. All the soup was taken and there is nothing now.
Quote
 
 
+1 #2 Akot 2012-06-02 18:42
Amony, you know, I wrote a while back urging Acholis to seek support of ICC & International community to handle LRA problem for I feel it is beyond local or government competency!

You & all the other girls, for to me, will remain girls until your violators answer for crime against you all! I even said they were going to be integrated in Museveni's army, I was right!
You must form an "association of victims of LRA", make yourselves known to the United Nation Office in Uganda - the UNICEF knows your story & will help you!

Don't keep quiet or in your coners alone! This is a matter Olara Otuunu should have taken interest in (he was UNICEF director of children affairs) I really admire you all, raising kids born under such conditions & trying to pick up life with almost nothing! May God help you all!
Form an Association!!
Quote
 
 
+1 #3 Betty Long Cap 2012-06-03 14:57
Quoting Jonathan Kalani:
Who can marry a girl who was abducted...?


Answer: a man who is not so fresh himself. Recognize rape victim status and give full credit due a woman who did not give up home or abandon her children.

Who could marry a man emotionally ravaged by decades of civil war? A woman who looks for more than soup. She wants a green olive tree, fair, and of goodly fruit.
Quote
 
 
0 #4 wodgot 2012-06-03 15:30
Even the likes of Brigadier Janet Mukwaya and Syda Bumba were tormented by LRA fighters during the protracted war, have their tormentors apologised to them? Amony must realise that revolution is not only for male sex.
Quote
 

This content has been locked. You can no longer post any comment.

Banner
Banner
Banner