{UAH} FRIENDS WE NEED TO DISCUSS ACHOLI VIOLENCE CANDIDLY
A Genocide in Northern Uganda? – The ‘Protected Camps’ Policy of 1999 to 2006
One of the 'protected camps' that were established during the LRA conflict in northern Uganda (Photo: http://joshuadysart.com)
The Lord’s Resistance Army (LRA) conflict effectively ended for northern Uganda in 2006, after 20 years of suffering, when the LRA moved out of Uganda at the start of the Juba Peace Talks. Despite relative peace returning to the area, the multiple legacies of this conflict have still not been fully addressed. One of the most contentious issue is the question of how to deal with human rights violations committed by the Government of Uganda (GoU) and the Uganda People’s Defence Forces (UPDF), as well as its predecessor, the National Resistance Army (NRA). The academic literature on the topic and human rights organisations are pretty clear about the fact that human rights violations were committed, in particular by the NRA in the 80s and 90s. Until this day, northern Ugandan victims call for justice for these crimes while the UPDF claims that it has prosecuted all violations that were committed. The ICC, with its jurisdiction starting in 2002, cannot help in this case, but there are also allegations regularly brought forward in northern Uganda that may fall under the jurisdiction of the ICC and are thus of particular interest.
When the Government of Uganda was not able to beat the LRA militarily, it started to drive the Acholi civilian population into so-called ‘protected camps’ in 1999. Civilians that did not comply were subjected to beatings or random shelling of their villages. In these camps people lived in grievous conditions around UPDF barracks. The army largely failed to protect the civilian population against LRA attacks on the camps. At the same time, diseases like Cholera, Ebola and Aids spread due to lacking hygiene and crowded conditions in the camps. At the height of the conflict 1.8 million people lived in such camps and roughly 1,000 of them were dying each week. Many northern Ugandans – from political and religious leaders to ordinary citizens – have claimed that this UPDF policy amounts to genocide. Only recently, an argument between the retired Bishop of Kitgum Macleod Baker Ochola II and a UN representative ensued at a workshop over whether the camp policy amounts to genocide, as claimed by Bishop Ochola.
Retired Bishop Ochola during the workshop at which he raised the genocide allegations (Photo: Sam Lawino/Daily Monitor)
It is clear that the conditions in the camps were horrendous. Chris Dolan, the Director of the Refugee Law Project in Kampala, Uganda, has fittingly described the camp system as ‘social torture’. According to the UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs the camps violated several rights of the displaced and nearly all UN Guiding Principles on Internal Displacement. Principles violated included, for example, the need to consult the people affected by the displacement (7.3), to minimise the time of displacement (6), to provide basic standards of living and medical care (18, 19), freedom of movement (14), the protection from abuses (11), and the protection of property (21). A diplomat I interviewed compared the IDP camp system to British concentration camp tactics during the Boer Wars in South Africa, and a staff-member of a human rights organisation stated in an interview that the GoU camp policy likely constitutes a crime.
Little doubt remains that the camp policy of the Ugandan Government was inhumane, maybe criminal, but does it amount to crimes under the Rome Statute? The Office of the Prosecutor of the ICC has not made any of the findings from its investigations of alleged UPDF and GoU crimes public, and I am not aware that the legal literature has attempted to clarify this aspect. I would like to give my own assessment of this question in the following paragraphs, stressing that I am not a lawyer and that my analysis might be open to criticism by people more experienced in questions of international criminal law.
The genocide allegations brought forward fall under Article 6 of the Rome Statute. The camp policy might meet Article 6 c stipulation of ‘deliberately inflicting on the group conditions of life calculated to bring about its physical destruction in whole or in part.’ The difficult question, as with all genocide findings, is the mental element of the crime. The prosecution has to prove that the GoU had the intent to destroy part of the Acholi population. From my own analysis of the conflict I would say the camp conditions are better defined as a consequence of the GoU’s indifference towards the north and its unwillingness to fully integrate the region into the economic and social systems of Uganda. President Museveni could not expect votes from the north during the active phases of the conflict anyway, so he didn’t really care what was happening there. I would say the camp policy was a case of neglect, but not the deliberate infliction of conditions of life calculated to destroy the Acholi. This becomes especially clear when comparing the GoU camp policy to the situation in Darfur, where the ICC issued a warrant for genocide. In this case the Government of Sudan deliberately hampered the delivery of humanitarian aid. In Uganda, the contrary is the case. The GoU even actively used international donor agencies to maintain and finance its camp policy and skillfully passed on the bill for the internal displacement it had caused. I won’t completely rule out that intent by the GoU could be proven, but I think an analysis of the conflict implies (criminal?) neglect rather than intent to destroy.
An IDP Camp in the western Sudanese region of Darfur. At first glance the camp situations look similar, but the nuances count for a genocide finding.
In my opinion, charges of crimes against humanity might actually be more interesting in this context than genocide charges. I assume that war crimes do not apply as it is debatable whether the LRA conflict was an international conflict during the time the camp policy was implemented. In fact, the ICC ruled that the Ituri conflict, in which Ugandan and Rwandan troops were meddling, was an internal conflict. So the assumption that the Court would rule in a similar way in the case of Uganda, despite the role of the Government of Sudan and the LRA’s operations in southern Sudan, is probable. The following sections will debate possible charges for crimes against humanity.
Possible counts for crimes against humanity are extermination (Article 7 I b), imprisonment (Article 7 I e), rape (Article 7 I g) and other inhumane acts (Article 7 I k). Extermination in Article 7 b is applied in particular to cases in which food or medicine is withheld from civilians. Current interpretations of international criminal law governing humanitarian situations state that the law demands that authorities have to allow humanitarian access to the displaced persons. Hindering this humanitarian access is a crime, but it is mostly not considered a crime to expose civilians to the risk of hunger, starvation or diseases. Again, the difference between the Darfur and Uganda cases helps to draw the line. In Darfur aid was withheld deliberately, in Uganda it was used to maintain the camp system. Article 7 I b is thus not applicable.
According to commentaries, imprisonment under Article 7 I e has a narrow definition and would thus not include the camp policy. Rape under Article 7 I g has been documented by both human rights organisations and researchers. Yet it remains unclear whether this is a problem of individual soldiers or a systematic and wide-spread government policy, as required under the gravity criterion of the Rome Statute (see § 46). Some of my interview partners claimed that rape was systematic, but there is no clear proof in the literature. A fact that speaks for the gravity of the crimes is that the Pre-Trial Chamber has ruled in § 46 of its first decision on the gravity threshold that the ‘social alarm’ surrounding the allegations should be taken into consideration when determining the gravity of a crime. Since victim demands for justice for GoU crimes are still very widespread today, it is fair to assume that there is ‘social alarm’ in northern Uganda. Apart from the gravity of the crimes, the complementarity issue is not clear, as the UPDF claims it has court martialed all of its soldiers who committed rape. Organisations like Human Rights Watch on the other hand have documented many cases in which soldiers were simply transferred without being held accountable for rapes. Rape charges thus remain a possibility.
One of the 'protected camps' in northern Uganda when it was still populated
Other inhumane acts under Article 7 I k have to be similar in gravity to the other counts in Article 7. Additionally, intent is needed and the acts have to be deliberate. According to the commentary, it covers all acts similar to but short of torture, particularly if they violate human dignity. If the GoU camp policy is defined as social torture, following Chris Dolan, it might be possible to apply Article 7 I k. From the accounts of life in the camps it would be difficult to argue that the conditions are not close to torture and do not violate human dignity. Yet, as with the crime of genocide, it would be difficult to prove that the GoU is deliberately and intentionally creating these adverse conditions in the camps.
To sum up, doubts remain whether the GoU could be charged for crimes under the Rome Statute for its camp policy during the conflict. Charges for rape and other inhumane acts may have a legal foundation. The mere possibility that allegations brought forward by many living in the formerly war-affected areas of northern Uganda could be relevant in the ambit of the Rome Statute calls for a clear statement by the ICC Office of the Prosecutor (OTP) in which the investigations conducted so far are described in detail. Despite the importance of publishing additional information the OTP has consistently declined to reveal any details about its investigations of GoU crimes. On an interesting side note, Ugandan President Yoweri Museveni himself was quoted by the New Vision government newspaper on 13 March 2010 stating that he would be ready to face a trial at the ICC if he was found to have committed crimes against humanity.
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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