World churches urge sustainable peace in Northern Uganda

-05/09/06

The central committe


World churches urge sustainable peace in Northern Uganda

-05/09/06

The central committee of the World Council of Churches (WCC) has appealed to the United Nations and the African Union to endorse a plan for a sustainable peace process between the government of Uganda and the ìLordís Resistance Armyî (LRA).

Churches and Christian assistance organizations have already welcomed the ceasefire between the Ugandan government and the LRA but had cautioned that both sides had to make a genuine commitment to the forthcoming peace talks.

In a statement on the plight of children in conflicts, with a focus on Northern Uganda, the central committee, meeting in Geneva 30 August to 6 September, condemned the atrocities being committed by the LRA and called on it, ìto abide by the terms of any cease fire, desisting from all acts of violence, including abductionsî.

The Lord’s Resistance Army (LRA) formed in 1987, is a rebel paramilitary group operating mainly in northern Uganda. The group is engaged in an armed rebellion against the Ugandan government in what is now one of Africaís longest running conflicts. The LRA has been accused of widespread human rights violations, including torture, rape, the abduction of civilians and the use of child soldiers.

The involvement of children in war is an offence not only against the children, but also against God, says the statement that was adopted by consensus by the 150 delegates from 348 churches worldwide.

It says the Gospel reminds Christians that children are hopeful signs of Godís unconditional love and promise to humankind. Any attack on children and their childhood ìmust be denounced as being intolerable and unacceptable.î

The plight of the children, their woes and suffering, continues to be immense and endless ìfrom Sierra Leone to Liberia, and from Sudan to the Democratic Republic of Congoî, the statement says. Millions of children around the world, but more particularly in Africa, are not only bystanders in conflicts, but targets.

The central committee called attention to the situation of child soldiers. They are abducted, often put under the influence of drugs to make them commit atrocities, and abused both physically and psychologically.

After the end of an armed conflict the reintegration of demobilized ex-child soldiers is a difficult and complex process. In Northern Uganda, during the last 20 years ìthousands of young children have been kidnapped, tortured, raped, virtually enslaved and sometimes killed by the LRA.î

The WCC central committee urged the Ugandan government to ensure the protection of all civilians. In particular, it said, children must be protected from abductions, child casualties should be minimized, and concrete plans should be developed for meeting the long-term needs of former child soldiers.

The statement acknowledges the engagement of the churches of Uganda in trying to find a peaceful solution to the crisis. Central committee said an important step on that road was the founding of the Acholi Religious Leaders Peace Initiative (ARLPI) of 1998, that was supported by the Ugandan Joint Christian Council.


World churches urge sustainable peace in Northern Uganda

-05/09/06

The central committee of the World Council of Churches (WCC) has appealed to the United Nations and the African Union to endorse a plan for a sustainable peace process between the government of Uganda and the ìLordís Resistance Armyî (LRA).

Churches and Christian assistance organizations have already welcomed the ceasefire between the Ugandan government and the LRA but had cautioned that both sides had to make a genuine commitment to the forthcoming peace talks.

In a statement on the plight of children in conflicts, with a focus on Northern Uganda, the central committee, meeting in Geneva 30 August to 6 September, condemned the atrocities being committed by the LRA and called on it, ìto abide by the terms of any cease fire, desisting from all acts of violence, including abductionsî.

The Lord’s Resistance Army (LRA) formed in 1987, is a rebel paramilitary group operating mainly in northern Uganda. The group is engaged in an armed rebellion against the Ugandan government in what is now one of Africaís longest running conflicts. The LRA has been accused of widespread human rights violations, including torture, rape, the abduction of civilians and the use of child soldiers.

The involvement of children in war is an offence not only against the children, but also against God, says the statement that was adopted by consensus by the 150 delegates from 348 churches worldwide.

It says the Gospel reminds Christians that children are hopeful signs of Godís unconditional love and promise to humankind. Any attack on children and their childhood ìmust be denounced as being intolerable and unacceptable.î

The plight of the children, their woes and suffering, continues to be immense and endless ìfrom Sierra Leone to Liberia, and from Sudan to the Democratic Republic of Congoî, the statement says. Millions of children around the world, but more particularly in Africa, are not only bystanders in conflicts, but targets.

The central committee called attention to the situation of child soldiers. They are abducted, often put under the influence of drugs to make them commit atrocities, and abused both physically and psychologically.

After the end of an armed conflict the reintegration of demobilized ex-child soldiers is a difficult and complex process. In Northern Uganda, during the last 20 years ìthousands of young children have been kidnapped, tortured, raped, virtually enslaved and sometimes killed by the LRA.î

The WCC central committee urged the Ugandan government to ensure the protection of all civilians. In particular, it said, children must be protected from abductions, child casualties should be minimized, and concrete plans should be developed for meeting the long-term needs of former child soldiers.

The statement acknowledges the engagement of the churches of Uganda in trying to find a peaceful solution to the crisis. Central committee said an important step on that road was the founding of the Acholi Religious Leaders Peace Initiative (ARLPI) of 1998, that was supported by the Ugandan Joint Christian Council.