Angelina Atyam | |
---|---|
Born | Angelina Acheng 1946 (age 75–76) |
Nationality | Ugandan |
Occupation | Human rights activist, midwife |
Spouse(s) | George Atyam |
Children | 6 |
Awards | United Nations Prize in the Field of Human Rights, 1998 |
Angelina Acheng Atyam (born 1946) is a Ugandan human rights activist and midwife. [1] In 1996, Atyam's daughter and 138 other girls were kidnapped from an Aboke school by guerrillas from the Lord's Resistance Army (LRA). Atyam founded the Concerned Parents Association to advocate for the release of the captive children, and acted as the organization's spokesperson, travelling to Europe and the United States. In recognition of her work, she was awarded the United Nations Prize in the Field of Human Rights in 1998. [2] Atyam was reunited with her daughter in 2004. [3]
Born Angelina Acheng in Bobi, Uganda, in 1946, Atyam is of Luo ethnic origin. A trained midwife, she settled in Lira after marrying George Atyam, and gave birth to three sons and three daughters.[ citation needed ]
On 10 October 1996, she learnt that her daughter Charlotte, then 14, was one of 139 girls who had been kidnapped from St Mary's Catholic boarding school in Aboke by guerrillas from the Lord's Resistance Army (LRA). Thanks to the efforts of the headmistress, Sister Rachel, who followed them into the bush, 109 were released. Charlotte was among the 30 girls who were not freed;[ citation needed ] they were marched into southern Sudan, and would be held captive by the LRA for years to come. When Atyam, a devout Catholic, discovered that her daughter was being held by LRA commander Rasca Lukwiya as his wife, she visited Lukwiya's mother in a neighbouring village, and convinced her that she was ready to forgive her son, their family, their clan, and their ethnic group. [4]
Along with other parents, Atyam founded the Concerned Parents Association. As its key spokesperson and campaigner, she travelled to northern Uganda calling for reconciliation. Her efforts to encourage the Ugandan government to negotiate with the LRA for the children's release were rebuffed, because officials refused to enter into discussions with terrorists.[ citation needed ] She publicised her cause across Europe and the United States. [5]
Atyam and her advocacy for the abducted girls were widely covered by radio stations and other media outlets. The resulting pressure caused LRA leader Joseph Kony to offer to release Charlotte on the condition that Atyam agree to stop campaigning. She countered that she would do so only if all 30 girls were released. No agreement was reached. She later explained: "Somehow all those other children had become one in Charlotte. We could not pull the one away and leave the rest .... All those children had become my children." [4]
Among those Atyam contacted for support were Ugandan President Yoweri Museveni, the Sudanese government, First Lady of the United States Hillary Clinton, members of the United States Congress, and United Nations agencies. [2] These efforts led to adoption by the US Congress of a resolution condemning the abduction of Ugandan children, and calling upon Sudan to secure the release of those still in captivity. [6]
In 1998, Atyam received the United Nations Human Rights Prize. On 23 October 2002, she reported to the United Nations Security Council on further atrocities by the LRA.[ citation needed ] She informed the council that during a period of 17 years, over 14,000 children had been abducted by the LRA in northern Uganda, and these children represented 85% of the rebels' forces. [7] Those in captivity were forced to fight in armed combat and made to kill and mutilate other child soldiers. Many were raped and bore children. [8] At the time of their release, over half of the children had HIV or AIDS or other sexually transmitted diseases. Many of their families refused to accept them. [7]
By 2004, although abductions had decreased, it was estimated that some 2,000 women and children were still in the hands of the LRA, forced to be soldiers and sex slaves. [8]
In July 2004, Atyam was reunited with her daughter. Charlotte had escaped from the LRA with her five-year-old son. Her two-year-old son was found the same day. [9]
Atyam is remembered for her messages of forgiveness. She opposed the Ugandan government's tendency to pursue a military solution to the LRA, because of the large number of child soldiers in the LRA's ranks. "Let us think about forgiving," she once said, "because if we don’t forgive these rebels, we are signing the death warrants of our own children." Now retired, she continues to live in northern Uganda. [10]
The Lord's Resistance Army insurgency is an ongoing guerrilla campaign waged by the Lord's Resistance Army (LRA) insurgent group since 1987. Currently, there is low-level LRA activity in eastern Democratic Republic of the Congo and the Central African Republic. The movement is led by Joseph Kony, who proclaims himself the "spokesperson" of God and a spirit medium. It aims to overthrow Yoweri Museveni's Ugandan government and establish a theocratic state based on a version of the Ten Commandments and Acholi tradition.
The United Nations Prizes in the Field of Human Rights were instituted by United Nations General Assembly in 1966. They are intended to "honour and commend people and organizations which have made an outstanding contribution to the promotion and protection of the human rights embodied in the Universal Declaration of Human Rights and in other United Nations human rights instruments".
Joseph Kony is a Ugandan militant who founded the Lord's Resistance Army (LRA), a Christian fundamentalist organization, designated as a terrorist group by the United Nations Peacekeepers, the European Union and various other governments.
Human rights in Uganda relates to the difficulties in the achievement of international rights standards for all citizens. These difficulties centre upon the provision of proper sanitation facilities, internal displacement, development of adequate infrastructure, as well as the mistreatment of the LGBT community, women, and children. Nonetheless, Uganda is, as per the Relief Web sponsored Humanitarian Profile – 2012, making considerable developments in this area.
The start of the period 1994 to 2002 of the Lord's Resistance Army insurgency in northern Uganda saw the conflict intensifying due to Sudanese support to the rebels. There was a peak of bloodshed in the mid-1990s and then a gradual subsiding of the conflict. Violence was renewed beginning with the offensive by the Uganda People's Defence Force in 2002.
The period from 2000 to 2006 of the Lord's Resistance Army insurgency in northern Uganda begins with the assault of the Uganda People's Defence Force (UPDF) upon LRA strongholds in South Sudan. This in turn led to a series of retaliatory attacks by the Lord's Resistance Army of an intensity not seen to since the mid-1990s. International awareness of the conflict gradually grew and in September 2005, the International Criminal Court issues warrants for the arrest of senior LRA commanders, including Joseph Kony.
Raska Lukwiya was the third highest-ranking leader of the Lord's Resistance Army rebel group founded in northern Uganda. Believed to be a native of Uganda's northern Gulu District, Lukwiya served successively as Brigade General, Deputy Army Commander and Army Commander of the LRA, the last being the highest LRA rank after those held by Joseph Kony and Vincent Otti.
The Aboke abductions were the kidnapping of 139 secondary school female students from St. Mary's College boarding school by rebels of the Lord's Resistance Army (LRA) on 10 October 1996, in Aboke, Kole District, Uganda. The deputy head mistress of the college, Sister Rachele Fassera of Italy, pursued the rebels and successfully negotiated the release of 109 of the girls. The Aboke abductions and Fassera's dramatic actions drew international attention, unprecedented at that time, to the insurgency in northern Uganda.
Aboke is a town in the Kole District of the Northern Region of Uganda. It was the location of the Aboke abductions, in October 1996.
The Lord's Resistance Army (LRA), also known as the Lord's Resistance Movement, is a rebel group and heterodox Christian group which operates in northern Uganda, South Sudan, the Central African Republic, and the Democratic Republic of the Congo. Originally known as the United Holy Salvation Army and Uganda Christian Army/Movement, its stated goals include establishment of multi-party democracy, ruling Uganda according to the Ten Commandments, and Acholi nationalism.
Uganda is a source and destination country for men, women, and children trafficked for the purposes of forced labor and sexual exploitation. Ugandan children are trafficked within the country, as well as to Canada, Egypt, the United Arab Emirates, and Saudi Arabia for forced labor and commercial sexual exploitation. Karamojong women and children are sold in cattle markets or by intermediaries and forced into situations of domestic servitude, sexual exploitation, herding, and begging. Security companies in Kampala recruit Ugandans to serve as security guards in Iraq where, at times, their travel documents and pay have reportedly been withheld as a means to prevent their departure. These cases may constitute trafficking.
The Christmas massacres took place on 24–27 December 2008, when the Lord's Resistance Army (LRA), a Ugandan rebel group, attacked several villages in Haut-Uele District, Democratic Republic of the Congo. The massacres were the fifth deadliest acts of terrorism in world history.
The Makombo massacre took place from 14 to 17 December 2009 in the Haut-Uele District of Democratic Republic of the Congo in the village and region of Makombo. Human Rights Watch (HRW) believes the attacks, which killed 321 people, were perpetrated by the Lord's Resistance Army (LRA), which denied responsibility.
Invisible Children, Inc. is an organization that was founded in 2004 to increase awareness of the activities of the Lord's Resistance Army (LRA) in Central Africa, and its leader, Joseph Kony. Specifically, the group seeks to put an end to the practices of the LRA, which include abductions and abuse of children, and forcing them to serve as soldiers. To this end, Invisible Children urges the United States government to take military action in the central region of Africa. Invisible Children also operates as a charitable organization, soliciting donations and selling merchandise to raise money for its cause. The organization promotes its cause by dispensing films on the internet and presenting in high schools and colleges around the United States.
The International Criminal Court investigation in Uganda or the situation in Uganda is an ongoing investigation by the International Criminal Court (ICC) into the Lord's Resistance Army insurgency which has been taking place in northern Uganda and neighbouring regions since 1987. The Lord's Resistance Army is a Christian-based group led by Joseph Kony that is accused of numerous human rights violations including massacres, the abduction of civilians, the use of child soldiers, sexual enslavement, torture, and pillaging. After the government of Uganda referred the matter to the ICC in December 2003, warrants of arrest were issued in 2005 for Joseph Kony, Raska Lukwiya, Okot Odhiambo, Dominic Ongwen, and Vincent Otti, who became the first people to be indicted by the Court.
Grace Akallo is a Ugandan woman who was abducted in 1996 to be used as a child soldier in the Lord's Resistance Army (LRA), a rebel military group led by Joseph Kony. At the time of her abduction, Akallo was 15 years old and attending St. Mary's College, a Catholic boarding school in Aboke, Uganda. She remained in the LRA for seven months before escaping. After escaping the army, Akallo returned to St. Mary's College to finish her high school education. She began her college education at the Uganda Christian University, but finished her undergraduate degree at Gordon College after receiving a scholarship. Akallo then went on to receive her master's degree from Clark University/ Upon her escape from the LRA, Akallo began working as an advocate for peace and for the rights of African women and children. She has been using both her experiences as a child soldier and the information she has gained in her higher education to advocate against violence and the use of child soldiers, as well as to help counsel other escaped child soldiers like herself.
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