Killings, Abductions, and Pillaging by Lord’s Resistance Army Continue
(New York, November 13, 2008) – The UN Security Council should urgently increase the number of peacekeepers to help protect civilians in northern Democratic Republic of Congo following renewed attacks by the Lord’s Resistance Army (LRA), four international and national human rights organizations said today.
Human Rights Watch, Enough, Resolve Uganda, and the Justice and Peace Commission of Dungu/Doruma also called on the United Nations, the United States, the United Kingdom, and governments in the region to develop and carry out an arrest strategy for LRA leaders wanted by the International Criminal Court (ICC).
According to reports, LRA combatants have killed at least 10 civilians, abducted scores of children, and pillaged and burned untold numbers of homes and schools in northeastern Congo in the last two months alone. On November 1, 2008, LRA forces attacked Dungu, the capital of Haut-Uélé district, in Orientale province. According to local sources, after fighting in which three government soldiers were killed, LRA fighters abducted at least 36 boys and 21 girls.
“The LRA leader, Joseph Kony, is continuing his brutal and abusive tactics,” said Georgette Gagnon, Africa director at Human Rights Watch. “The US and UK, along with the UN and governments in the region, should actively work together to apprehend LRA leaders wanted by the ICC.”
UN peacekeepers are currently struggling to protect civilians in North Kivu province, in eastern Congo, where combat between the rebel leader Laurent Nkunda and government soldiers and their allied militias has led to the displacement of a quarter of a million people and the deaths of hundreds of civilians since late August.
The United Nations says it has too few peacekeepers and logistical resources to protect civilians. On October 3, Alan Doss, the special representative of the UN secretary-general in Congo, asked the Security Council for reinforcements, but it has not yet taken any action and no countries have offered reinforcements. Some governments argue that the UN already has enough troops in the DRC that could simply be deployed differently. The continuing abduction of children by the LRA in northeastern Congo over recent months demonstrates those peacekeepers are overextended and struggling to fulfill their mandate to protect civilians. Troops are desperately needed in both the Kivus and Orientale.
On October 19-20, LRA rebels killed at least six people and abducted 17 others to transport their looted goods. Local youths then formed a self-defense unit to try to fend off the LRA. On September 17-18, the LRA attacked several villages simultaneously, abducting at least 45 children from Kiliwa and Duru. The LRA forces killed local leaders, pillaged, and burned as they swept through the villages. Precise information of these attacks has been difficult because of problems of access and security.
The ICC has issued warrants for the arrest of Joseph Kony and other Lord’s Resistance Army leaders for war crimes and crimes against humanity.
“Our people live in fear,” said Abbé Benoît Kinalegu of the Dungu/Doruma Justice and Peace Commission. “Our children are preyed on by the LRA rebels.”
Abducted children are forced to become combatants and girls are forced to provide sexual services for more senior combatants.
“The LRA is committing new abductions of children with the clear purpose of restocking its ranks,” said Michael Poffenberger of Resolve Uganda. “This was the strategy in Uganda for two decades.”
In August, 150 peacekeepers of the UN force in Congo, MONUC, and Congolese army soldiers were sent to Orientale province to contain the LRA and help provide protection for civilians. On October 25 and 29, armed clashes between the Congolese army and the LRA resulted in the death of six Congolese army soldiers and three LRA combatants, according to local reports.
Some 25,000 persons fled their homes after attacks in September and October, and another 50,000 have been displaced by the attack in Dungu. According to the UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs, virtually all of the people living in an area of more than 10,000 square kilometers of northeastern Congo fled because they feared future LRA attacks. Displaced people urgently require basic humanitarian support.
The government of Uganda and the LRA negotiated a peace deal in early 2008, but Kony failed to appear at a ceremony scheduled for signing the agreement on April 10. Since then he has occasionally promised to sign, but continues his attacks on civilians.
“For 20 years the international community has not had a comprehensive strategy to end the LRA insurgency,” said John Norris, executive director of the Enough Project. “Unless the world acts now to execute the ICC warrants, Joseph Kony’s war on civilians will continue and an already fragile region will be further destabilized.”



100 Nations to Ban Cluster Bombs – But not the biggest user, the USA
November 16, 2008By Angus Crawford | RINF.COM, Nov 14, 2008
On 3 December, more than 100 countries, including the UK, will sign a treaty banning cluster bombs.
As a result Britain, by law, will have to destroy more than 30 million explosives.
The UK does not have the facilities, so they are being exported to Germany for disposal.
“I feel good to work for a good thing in the world and for peace,” says Jorg Fiegert, production manager for Nammo Demil.
It runs a site in Pinnow in Germany which destroys munitions.
Over the next five years its work will include taking apart bomblets from British cluster munitions.
“It can punch through armour,” Jorg explains as he holds up a British bomblet.
It is only the size of an egg cup, and came from the MLRS, the Multiple Launch Rocket System.
Each one has six rockets, and within each rocket are 644 bomblets. They are designed to split open in the air and spread small bomblets over a wide area.
Cluster bombs have been used in countries including Cambodia, Kosovo, Afghanistan and Lebanon, and were used in the conflict in Lebanon in 2006.
Those who ratify the convention in December will then have eight years to get rid of their stockpiles of the weapons.
The UK government had already begun getting rid of its stocks by shipping them to Germany and elsewhere.
Nammo has a contract with the UK Ministry of Defence to destroy 28 million of these bomblets, and there are another 3.5 million in other systems to be disposed of.
“In principle everything except the explosive can be recycled,” explains Ola Pikner, Nammo’s vice president of marketing.
Whole weapons enter the factory, but raw materials for civilian use leave it.
He shows me how the MLRS rocket is split open.
The bomblets are extracted, the fuses are cut off and the copper inners are removed.
The explosive is then burnt off using red hot plasma.
The copper, aluminium and other metals are sold for scrap. The packaging for the bomblets is burnt for heating.
This will take up to 40% of their work for the next five years.
“There is huge potential”, says Ola Pikner, “but the number of cluster munitions from each country is not known.”
Campaigners believe there may be as many as a billion of them across Europe.
But the world’s biggest users – Israel and the USA – will not sign this treaty.
Nor, it’s thought, will China, Russia, India and Pakistan.
But Thomas Nash from the Cluster Munition Coalition remains undaunted by this.
“What you are going to see is a comprehensive stigmatisation of the weapon,” he says.
“Countries that don’t sign up won’t be able to use this weapon on operations with those that do.
“You’re going to see this weapon becoming a thing of the past.”
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