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By Alisha Ryu
Nairobi
20 March 2006
Ugandan President Yoweri Museveni says his troops will pursue members of the Ugandan rebel group, the Lord's Resistance Army, into neighboring Congo-Kinshasa if the rebels use it as a base to launch attacks in Uganda. VOA Correspondent Alisha Ryu reports from the East Africa Summit in Nairobi.
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The Ugandan army says it has received credible1 reports, indicating that the elusive2 leader of the Lord's Resistance Army, Joseph Kony, has moved his group from hideouts in southern Sudan to a new sanctuary3 in northeastern Congo-Kinshasa.
It is believed that Kony went there to link up with his long-serving deputy, Vicent Otti, who has been seen inside Congo's vast Garamba National Park.
The Lord's Resistance Army is listed as a terrorist organization by a number of countries, including the United States.
From left, Yoweri Museveni, Kenyan President Mwai Kibaki and Sudanese President, Omar El Bashir during opening IGAD in Nairobi, March 20, 2006
Speaking at a regional summit in Nairobi, Ugandan President Yoweri Museveni urged the United Nations and governments in Khartoum, southern Sudan, and Congo Kinshasa to work together in wiping out the Lord's Resistance Army once and for all.
"Where possible, cooperation among our countries can provide solutions," he said. "The cooperation between the government of Sudan, the SPLM and Uganda on the issue of a terrorist group led by Joseph Kony for the last three years is a good example. This cooperation has resulted in the great diminishing of this group and their uprooting4 from northern Uganda and southern Sudan. Remnants of them have now fled to the Garamba National Park of Congo-Kinshasa. This area is under the control of the United Nations and the Kinshasa government. We should use the same cooperation to decimate this group."
The Lord's Resistance Army began its rebellion in 1988, ostensibly to establish a religious society in Uganda.
But during nearly two decades of fighting, the rebels were better known for promoting extreme brutality5, including kidnapping and forcing thousands of children to become soldiers and sex slaves. The rebels also terrorized civilians6 in northern Uganda, forcing nearly two million people from their homes.
Yoweri Museveni arrives for session of 11th IGAD in Nairobi
Ugandan President Yoweri Museveni says its troops have been able to kill, capture, or disarm7 most of the rebels, leaving only about 120 hardcore fighters.
But on Sunday, the Ugandan leader told a state-owned newspaper that the rebels remain a threat to national security and said that he would send in troops to go after them in Congo-Kinshasa, with or without the country's permission.
The government in Kampala has long maintained that eastern Congo is a haven8 for rebel groups, who pose a threat to Uganda's security. A similar reason was used to justify9 the support of Congolese rebels and the deployment10 of Ugandan troops in eastern Congo during the central African country's recent five-year-long civil war.
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