Tuesday 7th of February 2012 03:25:06 PM
 
 
 
Home Column Insight Ugandans want LRA, UPDF offenders tried for war crimes

Ugandans want LRA, UPDF offenders tried for war crimes

E-mail Print PDF

A report on the Transitional Justice Bill that seeks protection for victims and witnesses and prosecution for war crimes perpetrators in Uganda has distributed responsibility among the LRA and government forces.

The UNDP report, 'Transitional Justice in Northern, Eastern Uganda and some parts of West Nile,' was launched on December 14, 2009. The UNDP handed over the report on behalf of the Justice, Law and Order Sector to the Principal Judge James Ogoola.

Ogoola said the bill focuses on three main areas: establishment of a formal mechanism to hear war crimes, cases of commanders who ordered genocide and atrocities; establishment of a truth telling commission like the South African commission which would be used to ask tough questions, about problems leading to wars and how to avoid the recurrence; and the establishment traditional justice where some combatants would be reintegrated into society.

Ogoola said the provisions of the bill must be in conformity with the Rome Statute since Uganda is a signatory to it. The Rome Statute was set up by the International Criminal Court to try crimes of genocide, crimes against humanity and war crimes.

He said that the tenure of the war crimes court, provided for under the bill, will continue even after the LRA trials to handle similar crimes that may occur in future. Ogoola said a registrar and three judges have already been appointed for the war crimes court. The Director of Public Prosecutions (DPP), Ogoola said, has attached six prosecutors to the court and police have offered 12 of their best investigators to assist in the trials. He said all of them have been undergoing training for the past year.

Theophane Nikyema, the UNDP resident representative and UN coordinator who handed over the report, appreciated Uganda'™s efforts to ensure that transitional justice is understood by JLOS. The Uganda government and communities put up measures such as amnesty for rebels and the traditional cleansing system among the Acholi and Langi.

According to the study findings contained in the report, religious institutions are the most trusted to facilitate the reconciliation process. The report says 53% of the respondents believe religious organisations would ensure reconciliation followed by 51% for the traditional institutions. In the Acholi region however the traditional method was the most preferred at 65% and 64% among men and women respectively. A total of 48% respondents think government can bring reconciliation better than any other institution while 25% believe NGOs are the best. Other structures which people believe can ensure reconciliation included international agencies at 35% of respondents, regional governments at 23%, foreign governments at 11%, and elders/chiefs at 19% and unity/reconciliation institutions at 11%.

On the culpability of crime, 74% of the respondents said LRA top leaders should be held accountable while 25% of the thought the LRA rank and file should be held culpable. One out of every four respondents who supported holding perpetrators answerable think that government should be held accountable while 16% thought Karimojong warriors should be blamed. 13% of the respondents thought that government security forces should also be tried. These include intelligence organisations, the army and the auxiliary security forces. When asked about options that would bring reconciliation, 45% thought that outright forgiveness was the best option, 46% thought confession and apologies would be appropriate before perpetrators can be pardoned.

Comments (1)Add Comment
Mr
written by kabayekka, January 19, 2010
Judge Ogoola seems to perceive the State of Uganda as if it was only recently formulated 2000. This Gentleman has guidelines in his profession much more in conformty with the cadres of the movement system of governance. This is the system that washed away the sins and injustice of the long suffering country of Uganda. The blood letting and killing fields of the 1966 up to 1986 seem not to have any concern for the judiciary he leads. The Roman statutes seem to understand the world in terms of Hitler the killer of the Jews and afterwards for Uganda it is the Kony war fullstop.

Write comment

busy
 
 
 

Podcasts

Videos

You need Flash player 6+ and JavaScript enabled to view this video.




RECOMMENDED

Society
Forget `Angry Birds’ Now you can play `Angry Brides’ A new Facebook app created by popular matrimonial website shaadi.com lets players fight ‘greedy grooms’ who demand dowry – a practice that stubbornly persists...
 

MOST READ

LATEST COMMENTS

Muteesasira DAvid Says:
2012-02-04 15:27:03
The government of Uganda released money for the youth, and Stanbic Bank  was amog the selected banks to take part in distribution process. So my request is   that what are the requirements in orde

Kaija Says:
2012-02-04 16:36:07

Thanks for the correction Peter.


 
Joomla Templates and Joomla Extensions by JoomlaVision.Com
Clear

28°C

Clear

Humidity: 48%

Wind: E at 12 mph

POLL

Will KCCA's kicking UTODA out of the Taxi business improve the transport sector?
 
ON THE SHELVES
Banner
 

Cover: Besigye, supporters disagree on guns, Colonel under pressure over calls for war not words.

Special reportLicensed killers, how the state protects those who kill for it.

BusinessMore hope than fear with SIM registration..


Name:

Email:

COMMENT
A light at the end of the tunnel Eliminating the menace of Neglected Tropical Diseases Though much of the world has never heard of diseases like lymphat...
 
 

 
 
Copyright © 2012 The Independent: You get the truth We Pay the Price. All Rights Reserved.