April 1-15, 2012
ISSUE 059
A bimonthly newspaper by the Media Diversity Centre, a project of African Woman and Child Feature Service
Kony 2012 Campaign ignored feelings of those who suffered By ROSEMARY OKELLO The release of a video campaign by Invisible Children- an American Organization, to capture Uganda’s rebel leader of the Lord’s Resistance Army, Joseph Kony, has gone viral in the YouTube with over eight million viewers. Although the video dubbed ‘Kony 2012’ has received resounding support in Uganda, women organisation however feel that the video has failed to address real issues of the conflict in Uganda.
Intervention
In a paid up advert in one of the dailies, they argue that the video has ignored gains made through various interventions by the women’s movement, human rights organisations, the academia, international development partners and the UN agencies who have been working in Northern Uganda over the last 26 years of the conflict war. “While the campaign against the LRA leader Joseph Kony is welcomed, the steam it has created overshadows the real concerns of the sufferers and survivors of the conflict in Uganda,” reads the statement.
Indeed the sentiments of the women’s organisations and partners which include ISISWICCE, Care, CEDOVIP, Teso Women and Akina Mama wa Africa could not have been expressed at a better time than now when the world is getting to terms with what the innocent children have gone through over the last 26 years. One such child now an adult whom we had the privilege of interviewing after she was released was Betty Ajok. Her story was made possible after she was rescued by the various organisations working in the area.
Below is her story
I was born in 1990 in Anaka District, some 50 kilometres north west of Gulu town in northern Uganda to Acholi parents. One day in 2000, as we went about playing with my agemates immediately after breakfast, we decided to move further into the forest to fetch firewood for our parents. But little did we know this was going to land us in trouble. Some armed men surrounded us and they told us to keep quiet or else they will slaughter us in a matter of seconds.
In a lightning speed, we were pushed into the bush and told that we were under arrest and asked to obey orders if we want to remain alive. As I walked deep in the jungle, barefooted with rest of the abductees, it came to my attention that the abductors could be the Lord’s Resistance Army (LRA) soldiers whom I had previously heard people in my village talk about in low tones. For the next three days, I was forced to walk in the cold muddy forest without food carrying loads of looted property. As we moved further north into the southern Sudanese territory, I saw another group of people, ostensibly from another abduction but from the other part of Uganda. We arrived into what looked like a makeshift camp and we were all called up to queue as we were addressed by the commanders. A middle aged man, roughly three times my age was brought to me directly and I was told that henceforth he was going to be my husband. Looking at my age and thinking of the unclear role of my new status, tears started Continued on page 2
Scores of women and children continue to live in less than perfect situations. Below: Rebel Leader Kony. Further below: Betty Ajok with her children. Photo: Reject Correspondent
Read more Reject stories online at www.mediadiversityafrica.org