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Africa Report N°124
26 April 2007
To access the executive summary and recommandations in French, please click here.
EXECUTIVE SUMMARY AND RECOMMENDATIONS
RECOMMENDATIONS
To the LRA leadership:
1. Reinforce the Juba delegation with senior military commanders and decision makers.
2. Respect all terms of the cessation of hostilities agreement, including moving all fighters to the designated assembly areas, and stop all movements towards the CAR.
To the Government of Uganda:
3. Take advantage to the greatest extent possible of the improved security in the north to develop an effective national land policy, demilitarise security by bringing in police, re-establish rule of law by building courts and improve delivery of essential services to displaced civilians.
4. Support establishment of a broader, more inclusive forum in Uganda to shape redevelopment, rehabilitation, and reconciliation in the northern region, and help address north-south tensions.
To the mediation team:
5. Pursue direct talks with the LRA more vigorously, including by using a respected intermediary to deliver to Joseph Kony a clear security and livelihood package.
6. Restructure the negotiations so that working groups can deal with all five points of the agenda in parallel.
7. Promote a two-track process:
(a) the Juba negotiations to make peace with the LRA, establish a roadmap for dealing with northern Uganda’s underlying structural problems and secure commitments from the government to address those problems and from donors to support the process; and
(b) a broad-based, inclusive follow-up forum in Uganda, shaped by key stakeholders, including Acholi traditional leaders, women, and youth, to tackle redevelopment, rehabilitation, and reconciliation in the conflict-affected areas.
8. Start preparing the communities of northern and eastern Uganda to take an active role in the second track on redevelopment, rehabilitation and reconciliation so as to build sustainable peace.
To the Government of Sudan:
9. Do not interfere with the Juba talks and cease all military supply to the LRA, whether in Sudan or the CAR.
To the Government of Southern Sudan:
10. Publicly and privately reassure the LRA that its safety on Sudan’s soil is assured as long as it remains committed to the peace process.
To UNMIS:
11. Deploy troops around the assembly areas and seek from the UN Security Council a specific mandate and additional means to support the Juba talks adequately.
To UN Special Envoy, Joaquim Chissano:
12. Establish an office in Juba to coordinate all international engagement in support of the talks and liaise with the U.S. and the UK in particular on an initiative to consolidate relations between Uganda, Congo and the Government of Southern Sudan and a joint LRA containment strategy.
To the U.S. and UK governments:
13. Appoint senior diplomats to work closely with the UN Special Envoy and apply pressure on the Ugandan government to support a two-track strategy as described above and desist from threatening military intervention in Congo.
14. Launch, in cooperation with the UN Special Envoy, an initiative for diplomatic and military cooperation between Uganda, the Government of Southern Sudan, Congo, UNMIS and MONUC that involves:
(a) commitment to cooperate and exchange information for stabilising the common border areas and to desist from threatening military operations on another’s territory;
(b) a joint contingency strategy to contain LRA force movements and prevent incursions into Uganda in the event of the Juba talks’ failure; and
(c) a mechanism for joint monitoring and information exchange on all movements of armed groups in the border areas.
15. Provide the necessary military assistance, training and funding to support deployment of Congolese and SPLM troops to contain LRA movements in the rebel-infested areas.
To the UN Security Council:
16. Establish a panel of experts to investigate the LRA’s sources of financial and military support; apply sanctions on its national and international suppliers; and encourage member states to prosecute diaspora Ugandans who raise funds or provide weapons for the LRA from their territory.
17. Urge member states to provide enhanced financial and logistical support to the efforts of the Special Envoy and his team.
To Donors:
18. Warn the Ugandan government that any unauthorised, unilateral military intervention beyond its borders will result in strong consequences, such as the suspension of direct budgetary support and other forms of aid, and condition support for the rehabilitation and reconstruction of northern Uganda on the active participation of northerners, including civil society.
Kampala/Nairobi/Brussels, 26 April 2007
Homepage photo: IDP camp in northern Uganda. IRIN.