Security Council Supports Military Action Against Ugandan Rebels, UN Envoy Says
New York, Dec 17 2008 7:10PM
The Security Council today voiced support for the joint military operation launched by the Democratic Republic of the
Congo (DRC), Uganda and Southern Sudan to flush out the Ugandan rebel Lord’s Resistance Army (LRA) from a remote
national park in north-eastern DRC, a senior United Nations envoy said.
“First they expressed sympathy and support for the military action in course,” Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon’s Special
Envoy for the LRA-Affected Areas Joaquim Chissano told reporters after briefing the 15-member body on the situation.
“They also urged that the peace process be continued and they would support the peace process, which means the signature
of the final agreement,” he said, stressing that LRA leader Joseph Kony had now failed “for the seventh time” to sign
the accord reached earlier this year with Uganda.
Ugandan Government forces have been fighting the LRA in the north of the country since the mid-1980s and during the
conflict the rebel group, which has spilled over into Sudan and DRC, has become notorious for human rights abuses
including the killing and maiming of civilians and the abduction and recruitment of children as soldiers and sex slaves.
The International Criminal Court has indicted Mr. Kony and four other LRA leaders on charges of war crimes and crimes
against humanity.
A series of accords struck by the two sides this year raised hopes that they could reach a permanent, wide-ranging
agreement ending the conflict, but each time Mr. Kony was expected to emerge from the jungle and sign the deal mediated
by the Government of Southern Sudan, he failed to appear.
ENDS