Showing posts with label Central African Republic. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Central African Republic. Show all posts

Sunday, June 7, 2009

Lord's Resistance Army (LRA) rebels in Uganda kidnapped around 135 villagers, including children

TO BE NOTED: From ReliefWeb:

"
Uganda's LRA rebels kidnap 135 Congolese villagers


- Ugandan LRA fighters abduct 135 Congolese villagers

- Rebels roaming despite Ugandan and Congolese offensive

By Joe Bavier

KINSHASA, June 5 (Reuters) - Lord's Resistance Army (LRA) rebels in Uganda kidnapped around 135 villagers, including children, in two attacks this week in Democratic Republic of Congo's north, a church official said on Friday.

LRA fighters raided the village of Dakwa around 200 km (125 miles) south of Congo's porous border with Central African Republic on Tuesday as residents gathered for a funeral, before returning to mount a second attack the following day, he said.

This week's attack is the latest in a series by the LRA, one of Africa's longest-running rebellions, which abandoned northern Uganda several years ago but continues to roam around Congo and Sudan despite the countries operations against them.

"They surrounded the village. The people were in mourning. They were taken away into the bush," said Marcel Kumbonyeki, the local Catholic priest in Bondo, some 200 km away, who was contacted by Dakwa's village priest soon after the attack.

"They carried out a second attack at 1400 (1200 GMT) on Wednesday. At that time a policeman was shot then stabbed to death, and they kidnapped the rest," he said.

Kumbonyeki said 138 people were kidnapped by the rebels in all, though three later escaped.

The local mission of the Swiss chapter of medical charity Medecins Sans Frontieres was attempting on Friday to verify details of the attack.

"People are starting to come south from Dakwa to where they feel safer. They are coming in small groups," Pierluigi Testa, MSF's local coordinator, told Reuters.

The LRA was pushed out of northern Uganda in 2005 after its two-decade bush war killed thousands of people and displaced 2 million, but has continued to mount raids in remote corners of Central African Republic, Congo and Sudan.

Uganda led an offensive also involving Congolese soldiers against LRA strongholds in Congo's isolated Garamba National Park on Dec. 14 after LRA leader Joseph Kony again failed to sign a deal to end his rebellion.

LRA fighters fleeing the assault on their bases killed at least 271 people in a series week massacres that forced tens of thousands to flee their homes.

Coalition forces failed to locate Kony, and the majority of Ugandan troops deployed in Congo for the operations have left.

But the rebels have continued to attack villagers in a region that straddles Congo's borders with Sudan and Central African Republic, killing some 1,000 civilians since late December, according to Human Rights Watch.

Kony and several of his commanders are wanted for war crimes by the International Criminal Court in The Hague.

(Editing by David Lewis)

For more humanitarian news and analysis, please visit www.alertnet.org"


General Map of Democratic Republic of the Congo

Map of 'General%20Map%20of%20Democratic%20Republic%20of%20the%20Congo'

  • Source(s):
    - United Nations Cartographic Section

Friday, May 8, 2009

Armed Sudanese and Chadian groups roam freely across the border, targeting aid agencies as well as villagers.

TO BE NOTED: From Reuters:

"REBELLION THREATENS AID OPERATION


An escalating insurgency and refugee influxes from conflicts in neighbouring countries have turned Chad into a humanitarian hotspot, with aid agencies struggling to help around half a million people.
  • 320,000 refugees from Sudan and Central African Republic
  • Armed attacks displace 180,000 Chadians
  • Aid agencies face logistic and security nightmare
President Idriss Deby has health problems and is holding on to government by a thread, under regular attack from rebels with a range of regional ties who want to oust him. Tens of thousands of Chadians are displaced by violence near the border with Sudan. And massive numbers of refugees from Sudan's Darfur region and Central African Republic lead a harsh existence in camps in eastern and southern Chad. The presence of refugees has put added pressure on scarce water and food resources in the semi-desert east. Armed Sudanese and Chadian groups roam freely across the border, targeting aid agencies as well as villagers. The insecurity makes it hard for agencies to operate in the area, and violence has escalated since the collapse of a short-lived October 2007 peace deal between the government and four rebel groups. Some experts say Chad's conflict is part of a competition for regional dominance in which Central African Republic, Democratic Republic of Congo, Eritrea, Libya, Rwanda and Uganda are all vying for influence.

KEY FACTS


Refugees in Chad 56,000 refugees from Central African Republic, mostly in south
265,000 Sudanese refugees, most in eastern border camps (Source: U.N. Consolidated Appeal 2009)
Internally displaced in Chad 180,000 (Source: U.N. Consolidated Appeal 2009)
Average life expectancy 50.4 (Source: U.N. Development Programme, 2007/2008)
Children dying before the age of five 209 per 1,000 live births (UNICEF, 2009)
Doctors 4 per 100,000 people (Source: U.N. Development Programme, 2007/2008)
Children under five underweight for their age 37 percent (UNICEF, 2009)
Population with access to improved sanitation 9 percent (UNICEF, 2009)
Adult literacy rate 25.7 percent (Source: UNDP, 2007/2008)





Tuesday, May 5, 2009

70,000 the number of Central Africans fleeing to Chad to escape armed conflict over the past six years

TO BE NOTED: From Irin:

"
CENTRAL AFRICAN REPUBLIC-CHAD: Violence continues to drive out CAR families


Photo: Celeste Hicks/IRIN
Children from Central African Republic who are among the some 18,000 people who have fled to southern Chad since the beginning of the year
DAHA, SOUTHERN CHAD, 5 May 2009 (IRIN) - Aid agencies are racing to position food and other relief supplies for some 18,000 men, women and children from Central African Republic who fled to southern Chad, most of whom have taken refuge next to the border. Rains due in the coming weeks will cut access to the refugees, aid workers say.

Up to 100 Central Africans continue to pour into Chad each day, fleeing armed attacks on civilians and fighting between rebels and government forces in northern CAR.

“The rainy season has almost started and many of these roads [leading to the refugee sites] will become impassable,” Annette Rehrl, spokesperson for the UN Refugee Agency (UNHCR) in Chad, told IRIN. “This basically means the refugees will be cut off.”

The UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA) said in a recent bulletin: “The situation is currently under control but access problems during the rainy season remain a worry for everyone.”

More on CAR unrest
Remote refugees pose logistical hurdle
CAR refugees not ready to return home
Think-tank warns of heightened risk of violence as talks open
UNHCR officials say the refugees will not be moved, despite the agency’s policy that a refugee camp should be at least 50km from a border. The village of Daha, where about 11,000 of the 18,000 refugees are living, is just metres from the Awok River, which forms the border between Chad and CAR.

The refugees will not be relocated, UNHCR’s Måns Nyberg told IRIN. The government has not agreed to designate a site for them and most of the refugees have said they want to stay close to the border, he said.

Mahamat Nour Abdoulaye, coordinator of the government National Commission for the Reception and Reinsertion of Refugees (CNAR), told IRIN that during CNAR missions to the area, refugees have said that they do not want to move.

“For now there is no plan to move the refugees. Were we to move them it would have to be to another department, some 200 kilometres away; they have said they prefer to stay where they are.”

He noted that currently the refugees are secure even with their proximity to the border.

Many refugees told IRIN they do not want to move farther inside Chad and leave behind relatives who are hiding in the bush in CAR.


Photo: Celeste Hicks/IRIN
Many of the refugees say they want to stay near the Chad-CAR border so as not to lose contact with relatives hiding in the bush in northern CAR
Refugees are also living in the border village of Massambagne, some 100km northeast of Daha. The UN Children’s Fund (UNICEF) interim head of office in Daha, Ahmat Issa Outman, told IRIN: “We are most worried about Massambagne, where there is only one well for 1,000 locals and more than 1,000 refugees.”

The remaining refugees are in Betimera and Koi, farther north.

UNICEF and the NGO Solidarité are rushing to build wells before the rains come, aid workers told IRIN.

The UN World Food Programme has begun to pre-position food so it will be available when the rains arrive. Families recently received a two-month supply of maize flour, pulses and cooking oil, according to Jacques Baikita, UNHCR assistant protection officer in Daha.

Central Africans at Daha told IRIN that civilians have been caught in crossfire, with some accused by the government of supporting rebels.

The 18,000 refugees – who have fled in waves since January – bring to about 70,000 the number of Central Africans fleeing to Chad to escape armed conflict over the past six years.

ch/np/aj


Theme(s): (IRIN) Conflict, (IRIN) Refugees/IDPs"



Reference map of Central African Republic
Map of 'Reference%20map%20of%20Central%20African%20Republic'

Saturday, February 14, 2009

However, Kony is still out there.

TO BE NOTED:



"Escapee: Kony is angry

As information dribbles out regarding Uganda's faltering military operation in the Democratic Republic of the Congo against Joseph Kony and his Lord's Resistance Army, we learn that Kony is angry.

Well, why not? His camps were bombed and now his top two commanders are negotiating their surrender.

In a story from the UN's Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs, we learn from an escapee who was with the LRA camp when it was attacked, that Kony was already gone.

"The first day of the attack I was in the camp," said 21-year-old Jackline Apio, who had been in captivity for six years.

"LRA leader Joseph Kony had told us a day earlier there were plans to bomb the camp and ordered all his commanders and other soldiers to leave immediately."

This begs the question, how did he know? It also confirms earlier suspicions that Kony has informers close to the government.

Apio continues: "At about 11 a.m., after we had cooked, we heard the sound of approaching helicopters. Minutes later they [the helicopters] started bombing the camp. We all ran away. "

Why did Kony not have everyone abandon the camp? There have been strong fears that Kony would use the hundreds of abductees as human shields in case of an attack, which is why many in the international community have resisted attacking Kony long ago.

Here we can clearly see that Kony sacrificed these civilians to cover his escape and those of his fighters and commanders.

This should also provide insight into the kind of man we're dealing with.

Apio: "After two hours the rebels came back [to the camp] and collected food, medicine and weapons they had abandoned. The rebels, women and children later joined Kony."

Now it gets interesting: "He was looking enraged, and we started walking towards [the] Central African [Republic]," Apio says.

"Kony later changed [his] plans and ordered everyone to split into groups of 10, including the women and children. He said we should all remain in [DR] Congo. I don’t know where he went, but he remained somewhere with a few soldiers."

Again, Kony's cunning becomes apparent. He knows that others know he has wanted to go the CAR for a long time. Most suspected he would. Knowing that, however, he reverses course, and decides to stay. The only way his army can survive, however, is for them to break into small groups -- again his standard tactic, but quite effective.

But, there is a risk, of course, and that is losing his command and control.

"Our group was led by Dominic Ongwen [Kony’s deputy]. We were 30 and were attacked several times by UPDF [Ugandan People’s Defence Forces] soldiers. On 22 January in the afternoon, our group was attacked by UPDF; we had walked the whole night and were resting," she continues.

"I was shot in my left thigh. Then the [UPDF] commander appeared and ordered [the] soldiers not to shoot children or women.

"The other rebels ran away. We were five, two babies, two young children and I. I thought I would not survive; everyone was screaming and children crying. I said my last prayer because Kony [had] told us that anyone caught by the UPDF would be killed."

This is what Kony tells his captives in order to keep them under his tumb.

Ironically, it is Ongwen and Kony's latest deputy, Okot Odhiambo, who now want to surrender. As I have mentioned, this will be a serious blow to Kony's forces, and if nothing else, will cause others in his camp to do the same.

However, Kony is still out there.

As Apio explains, "It is difficult to get Kony, he keeps changing his location. Not even his commanders know his real location because he does not use satellite phones."