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Africa Subsaharan
Ugandan army claims LRA rebels and leaders in CAR
2007-02-25
Uganda's army said Friday that 400 rebel Lord's Resistance Army fighters and their leaders have moved into the Central African Republic, dashing hopes of a renewal of stalled peace talks. "The LRA leaders Joseph Kony and Vincent Otti crossed (into CAR) with their fighters," army spokesman Major Felix Kulaije told AFP by telephone.

The northern Ugandan rebels had entered the CAR earlier this week through Tambura in southern Sudan, which has borders with both countries, and started to link up with local rebel groups. "We have information that they crossed over to the CAR early in the week and we are still monitoring this," Kulaije said. "This means prolonging the problem, frustrating the peace process, further violating the cessation of hostility agreement and making the whole affair a regional problem."

The LRA denied the accusation, stating that the move would not be in their interest. "There is no military gain in moving to the Central African Republic at the moment," LRA spokesman Obonyo Olweny told AFP in Nairobi by telephone.

The LRA has refused to resume peace talks with the Ugandan government in the southern Sudanese capital Juba, expressing safety fears and accusing the chief Sudanese mediator of bias. A truce agreement between Kampala and the rebels is due to expire at the end of the month. Kulaije said that Uganda was prepared to extend the agreement, but that the LRA delegation needed to come to Juba.
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Africa Horn
Uganda rebels threaten renewed war
2007-01-16
Leaders of the Lords Resistance Army (LRA) have said they want to leave southern Sudan - where they have assembled for peacetalks - and return to Uganda.
"We are unwelcome in Sudan so they have to go back to Uganda. We foresee that is the only logical option."
Monday's statement comes after the LRA's ended peace talks with Uganda on Friday. If the LRA returns to Uganda, it would mark the start of a new round of civil war in the African country. "We are unwelcome in Sudan so they have to go back to Uganda," LRA spokesman Obonyo Olweny told Reuters by telephone from Nairobi on Monday. "We foresee that is the only logical option."
What, precisely, is it that makes you think you're welcome in Uganda?
The Ugandan army said they would attack the LRA if they tried to cross back into Uganda. "We shall hit them," Major Felix Kulayigye, a Ugandan army spokesman, said. "Any attempt to come back to northern Uganda would be taken as a resumption of war."
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Africa Subsaharan
Rebels demand huge cuts in Ugandan army at peace talks
2006-08-21
JUBA, Sudan - Uganda’s rebel Lord’s Resistance Army on Monday demanded huge cuts in the government military and 40-percent representation in the reduced force at peace talks in southern Sudan. The position, presented at halting negotiations aimed at ending northern Uganda’s brutal, nearly two-decade war, was immediately rejected by Kampala, which called the demand ‘ridiculous’ and tantamount to disbanding the army. But LRA officials insisted that a sharp reduction in the Ugandan People’s Defense Forces (UPDF) was the only way to achieve lasting stability and called for foreign peacekeepers to be deployed to ensure the drawdown is implemented.

At the venue for the talks in the southern Sudanese town of Juba, they said they wanted the UPDF cut from 100,000 troops to 20,000, 12,000 of which would be drawn from the current army and the other 8,000 from the ranks of the LRA. ‘The rest of the soldiers must be demobilized and a new system set up to cater for them, for those with disabilities, and for those who want to start businesses and so on,’ LRA spokesman Obonyo Olweny told AFP.
One of the more useful things that happen when you sit down to negotiate with the other side is that you generally figure out what's most important on their minds. I think we just found out what's really bothering the LRA.
The rebels also want a full list of government weapons stockpiles, the withdrawal of UPDF forces from contested areas in northern Uganda and foreign peacekeepers from as-yet undetermined contributor nations, he said.
"...and a pony!"
Try calling the French, I hear they're not busy any more ...
Kampala’s delegation at the halting talks being hosted and mediated by the government of autonomous southern Sudan and the region’s capital of Juba, flatly dismissed the demands and rejected the rebels estimate of the size of the army. Ugandan officials say their army was reduced by half from 100,000 to 50,000 in 1991 and 1992 following donor demands that the force be streamlined.

‘What the LRA is asking for is for the UPDF to be basically disbanded,’ said Paddy Ankunda, a spokesman for Kampala’s team. ‘This is really ridiculous. ‘The UPDF was set up according to the constitution, so what they seem to be telling us is for us to throw out the constitution,’ he said, adding that the government would not give the rebels any description of its weapon supplies. ‘We will not tell them what weapons we have because we are the government and they are the rebel force,’ Ankunda said.
There's a moment of clarity. We're the government and we're the ones with a monopoly on violence within the country.
The on-again, off-again talks, which began last month, broke on Monday after the LRA presented its positions on disarmament, the effect of which on the negotiations was not immediately clear.
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