
11/03/2004
Refugees International (RI) is conducting a humanitarian assessment mission
in northern Uganda from November 4-22. This will be RI’s third
mission to northern Uganda in the past 3 years.
Uganda is experiencing one of the world’s worst humanitarian
crises. For the past 18 years, the brutal Lord’s Resistance Army
(LRA) has been conducting a campaign of terror against civilians in the
north --- raping women, murdering people, burning villages, and
abducting roughly 25,000 children to fight with them. This has
led to the displacement of over 1.6 million people, 90 percent of the
population in northern Uganda. These numbers of internally
displaced are equal to those in Darfur, but the international community
has not mobilized an equal response. Although the Ugandan
military has experienced some recent military successes, the situation
on the ground has not improved.
Jan Egeland, the Under Secretary General for Humanitarian Affairs, has
called northern Uganda the world’s greatest neglected emergency. The
displaced live in squalid, over-crowded camps in continual fear of LRA
attacks, without access to adequate food, water, healthcare or
education. Gender-based violence in the camps is endemic.
Every night, tens of thousands of women and children risk attack and
walk to town centers in search of safety for the night. The
international community and the Government of Uganda have failed to
effectively meet the needs of Ugandan civilians.
Ugandan civil society, religious and traditional leaders have
repeatedly pointed out the futility of a military solution to the
crisis in northern Uganda. Eighty percent of the LRA consists of
children abducted against their will, and these children are the
casualties of the war. Attempts at peacefully resolving the
crisis have been unsuccessful.
In Uganda, the RI team will assess the protection and assistance needs
of IDPs and whether or not these needs are being met. The RI team
will specifically focus on the mental health needs of Ugandan civilians
and different approaches to providing psycho-social support. The
crisis in northern Uganda has been repeatedly referred to as a “crisis
of children.” We will focus on assessing the support and services
being provided to former child combatants, particularly girls. In
addition, given the increasing numbers of LRA deserters requesting
amnesty, the RI team will focus on the reintegration assistance being
provided to ex-combatants. We will also explore long-term
prospects for peace and reconciliation.