January13, 2007:
The government has asked the UN to help provide support for its
peacekeeping battalion slated for deployment in Somalia. The government wants
money to pay for personnel, but is also requesting body armor and "other
military gear" appropriate to deployment in a war zone. The Ugandan force is a
"battalion-plus" - a 1000-troop task force. The parliament has not approved the
mission but is expected to do so by the end of January. However, Uganda's main
opposition party, the Forum for Democratic Change, opposes the deployment, as
does its leader, Kizza Besigye. When Uganda first offered to raise and send the
peacekeeping contingent, it indicated the battalion would be used to protect
Somalia's Transitional Government, then located in Baidoa. Since then the
Ethiopian and Transitional Government offensive against the Islamic Courts has
driven the Islamist militias into a corner of southern Somalia. Mogadishu,
however, remains very unstable. It is not clear if Uganda will permit its
battalion to deploy in Mogadishu. Still, there are many places in central and
southern Somalia a reliable task force would be useful in security, convoy, and
stability operations. Ugandan forces have a lot of experience in what is
sometimes called "counter-bandit" operations -patrolling roads, escorting
convoys, and protecting the local population from raiders. That experience is
useful in most of sub-Saharan Africa. But the bureaucrats are moving too slowly
to get the peacekeepers into Somalia when they could do the most good.
January
10, 2007: The president of Sudan said that his government wanted all LRA bases
removed from Sudan. The statement said that Sudan was prepared to help
"eliminate" the LRA and that Sudan would pursue "a military solution" if LRA
fighters did not choose peace. For years Uganda accused Sudan of backing the
LRA, and Uganda has lots of evidence to back up the accusation. However, Sudan
later let the Ugandan Army conduct anti-LRA operations in south Sudan. Sudan
encouraged the August Uganda-LRA truce and its "south vice-president" has
mediated the continuing talks. However, over the past three months, an
increasing number of ambushes, murders, and robberies in south Sudan have been
attributed to LRA fighters. It appears the Sudan government is sending the LRA
a clear message that it must rein in its forces.
January
6, 2007: The World Food Program said that it estimated 230,000
internally-displaced persons (IDPs) returned to their homes in northern Uganda
during the year 2006. The August 2006 Uganda-LRA truce is the primary reason
for the return. While the Uganda-LRA truce has been shaky, the peace process
has held together. Uganda now faces the hard job of reintegrating the returned
IDPs. That means reviving farms and small businesses that in many cases no
longer exist.