{UAH} ACHOLI USE CHILDREN FOR THEY ARE EASY TO CAPTURE, INDOCTRINATE AND TRAINED TO USE SMALL ARMS
Fuelling Fear
THE LORD’S RESISTANCE ARMY AND SMALL ARMS
The Lord’s Resistance Army (LRA) is a non-state armed group that
forces children to fight a war using small arms. The war is directed,
for the most part, against the civilian population of northern
Uganda.
This chapter, which is based on field research conducted
with former LRA fighters, explores the LRA’s dependence on
small arms; how it acquires, stores, and maintains its weapons;
and how weapons and ammunition are used by the group.
The following are among the main findings of this chapter:
• The LRA depends on small arms to conduct its operations.
• The LRA requires few resources other than small arms and
people to use them.
• Children are easily captured, indoctrinated, and trained to use
small arms. Small arms facilitate a deliberate policy of terrorizing the
civilian population.
• The LRA acquires small arms constantly and keeps them in
good repair.
• Weapons have been cached throughout northern Uganda
and southern Sudan.
• Plentiful arms stocks mean the LRA is far from finished as a
fighting force.
The scale of the problem
The LRA commits massacres and atrocities, and abducts children,
using extreme violence to force them to become soldiers. An esti mated 25,000 to 30,000 children have been abducted since 1987.
Some have escaped; others have died from violence, disease, hunger, and exhaustion. Children now constitute between 80 and 90
per cent of the LRA’s fighting force.
In the past 19 years, the fighting has killed thousands of people and displaced close to 1.3 million within northern Uganda.
Although people are often attacked with knives and agricultural implements, small arms remain the fundamental facilitators of
violence. They are used to corral people and to prevent them from escaping.
The Ugandan army has not been able to defeat the LRA militarily. It fights the LRA with armoured personnel carriers, aircraft,
and around 40,000 troops, thereby curtailing some of the LRA’s activities and disrupting its supply lines. But, although the LRA has
declined in numbers, has few resources, and has difficulty moving equipment, it is able to continue fighting, killing, and abducting.
Because it is well equipped with small arms, it is able to attack the local population and the Ugandan army in both Uganda and
neighbouring Sudan.
The LRA and small arms: a snapshot
Small arms are the most suitable weapon for the LRA’s operations, and the group consequently uses few larger weapons. The supply
and maintenance of small arms is therefore a crucial gauge of the LRA’s capacity to continue fighting.
Table 11.2 LRA weapon inventory: past and present
Frequently used:
Kalashnikov derivatives (particularly Chinese Type 56/56-2 rifle)
Type 81/RPK light machine gun
PKM light machine gun
Less frequently used:
B-10
RPG
60 mm mortar
Past inventory/rarely used:
FN-FAL/SLR
G3
81 mm mortar
12.7 mm anti-aircraft gun
SPG-9
SA-7
Note: The LRA also stocks hand grenades and landmines.
Sources: Interviews with a wide range of persons in Gulu and Kampala, 21—27 May 2005
Holdings: For the most part, the LRA uses assault rifles and light machine guns, reserving the use of larger weapons, such as RPGs,
for attacks on light armoured vehicles. Even when the Sudanese government supplied heavier weapons, the LRA used mainly small
arms because it needed to be highly mobile. Current weapon holdings reflect this, with the LRA stocking very few heavy weapons.
Acquisition: Northern Uganda and the surrounding countries are awash with small arms. The LRA is able to capture and trade
weapons amid this plentiful supply. In many cases, it is able to do so because it is well armed. In short, as has been the case with
armed groups elsewhere, arms beget arms.
Stocks: The LRA has two broad and connected systems in place for storing arms and ammunition: large caches of potentially
hundreds of weapons buried in the far north of Uganda and southern Sudan, and small, local caches scattered throughout Uganda.
While the LRA’s care of weapons is often rudimentary, it appears to be effective. Not only are the weapons currently used by the
LRA serviceable, but many of those cached are also likely to be so for many years to come.
Prospects: The LRA is unlikely to be short of either arms or ammunition, even though recent UPDF operations have made it more
difficult for the LRA to resupply. A simple equation determines the future of the LRA: if it has weapons, it can abduct, and, because
it can abduct and arm fighters, it can continue fighting. Solving this equation requires either removing sources of small arms or
stopping the LRA from abducting.
The chapter concludes that the current military approach to the confl ict adds to the small arms problem in northern Uganda.
Largely due to government and military policies of arming sections of society against the LRA and other armed groups, levels of
armament among the civilian population in the region have risen sharply. This situation contributes to a cycle of insecurity and
further armament, of which the confl ict with the LRA is but a part.
Small Arms Survey 2006: Chapter 11 Summary
EM
On the 49th Parallel
Thé Mulindwas Communication Group
"With Yoweri Museveni, Ssabassajja and Dr. Kiiza Besigye, Uganda is in anarchy"
Kuungana Mulindwa Mawasiliano Kikundi
"Pamoja na Yoweri Museveni, Ssabassajja na Dk. Kiiza Besigye, Uganda ni katika machafuko"
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