This article or section is in a state of significant expansion or restructuring. You are welcome to assist in its construction by editing it as well. If this article or section has not been edited in several days , please remove this template. If you are the editor who added this template and you are actively editing, please be sure to replace this template with {{ in use }} during the active editing session. Click on the link for template parameters to use. This article was last edited by Applodion (talk | contribs) 4 seconds ago. (Update timer) |
Northern Ugandan campaign | |||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Part of the Ugandan Bush War | |||||||
| |||||||
Belligerents | |||||||
Uganda (NRM government) Karamojong groups Langi rebels | Uganda National Liberation Army (UNLA) and allies | ||||||
Commanders and leaders | |||||||
David Tinyefuza Peter Kerim Samson Mande | Bazilio Olara-Okello Eric Odwar Stevenson Ojukwu John Kilama Kenneth Kilama Joseph Obonyo | ||||||
Units involved | |||||||
Karamojong militias UNLA defectors and rebels | UNLA
Acholi militias | ||||||
Strength | |||||||
Thousands | Thousands | ||||||
Casualties and losses | |||||||
Unknown | Heavy |
In the last phase of the Ugandan Bush War from January to March 1986, the National Resistance Army (NRA) conducted a military campaign to conquer northern Uganda beyond the Nile, an area still held by the Uganda National Liberation Army (UNLA) and allied militias that had previously been loyal to the recently deposed government of Ugandan President Tito Okello. After heavy fighting, the NRA emerged victorious, capturing all of the country. The UNLA and its allies largely disbanded their forces or surrendered, though a substantial number also fled into exile to continue resistance. The conquest of northern Uganda by the NRA marked the formal end of the Ugandan Bush War, though another civil war erupted a few months later.
In April 1979 Tanzanian forces and the Uganda National Liberation Army (UNLA), a coalition of armed rebel groups united under the Uganda National Liberation Front (UNLF), deposed the President of Uganda, Idi Amin. A new UNLF government was installed, but it was weak and exercised little control over the country. [1] Eventually, Milton Obote assumed power in 1980 through a disputed election, and ruled through repressive methods, including the incarceration and killing of dissidents. [2] [3] In response, a number of opposition groups rebelled, with the developing conflict becoming known as the "Ugandan Bush War". Over time, Yoweri Museveni's National Resistance Movement (NRM) and its armed wing, National Resistance Army (NRA), emerged as the most important insurgent group in southern Uganda. As the civil war dragged on for years, parts of the UNLA became increasingly dissatisfied with Obote and his policies, including favoring ethnic Langi soldiers in the military over Acholi troops. [4]
On 27 July, several Acholi officers of the UNLA launched a coup which overthrew President Obote. General Tito Okello assumed power in his place. The new regime was weak and unstable, and Okello made overtures to anti-Obote rebel groups to form a coalition government and end the fighting. Though these efforts yielded some results, the coup deeply damaged the UNLA which began to devolve into infighting groups. Museveni took advantage of the disruption caused by the coup to strengthen his forces. In August the NRA launched a series of co-ordinated attacks that resulted in the capture of significant amounts of territory in central and western Uganda. [5]
In August 1985, the NRA launched a series of coordinated attacks that resulted in the capture of significant amounts of territory in central and western Uganda. [6] In course of these operations, the NRA greatly expanded by recruiting new troops in captured territories and absorbing defected government soldiers. [5] In a few months, it enlisted around 9,000 fighters, [7] growing to about 10,000 troops overall by December 1985. [8] That month, a peace agreement was signed by Okello's government and the NRA, but the deal broke down almost immediately as both parties violated the agreed truce. [6] By January 1986, the UNLA was starting to collapse as the rebels gained ground from the south and southwest. [7] Okello's regime effectively ended when Kampala was captured by the NRA on 26 January 1986. The NRM formed a new government, and the NRA became the new regular army of Uganda. [9] Tito Okello fled the capital via helicopter. [10] Despite this massive defeat, the UNLA attempted to rally once more, and intended to defend its remaining holdings in northern Uganda. [9]
The UNLA holdouts in the north largely consisted of Acholi troops [11] and were led by Bazilio Olara-Okello. [12] Thousands of UNLA troops had fled north, [12] where they still enjoyed substantial support. The willingness of northerners to aid the UNLA's resistance attempts were fuelled by the widespread belief that the NRM/A was planning to take revenge on the north for the war crimes committed during the Bush War. These fears were seemingly confirmed when southerners killed and abused northern civilians –particularly Langi and Acholi– in a number of incidents after the Battle of Kampala. Some victims fled from Kampala back to the north, spreading tales of the attacks. Conversely, abuses were mostly committed by mobs or non-NRA troops, though NRA soldiers did often steal from northerners in Kampala. [13] Meanwhile, President Museveni repeatedly made speeches on radio declaring that the NRM/A was committed to lawful behavior, had no intention to take revenge on northerners, and would investigate as well as limit abuses by the NRA. [14] However, these promises were often distrusted, and attacks on northerners remained frequent in NRA-controlled territories. As a result, ethnic tensions continued to rise across the country. [15] When the UNLA high command thus convened a meeting with elders and community leaders from Gulu and Kitgum, the civilian representatives gave their support to efforts of defending the north from the NRA. [11] In contrast, the remaining UNLA soldiers –including many officers– declared their former leader, Tito Okello, a traitor, coward, and murderer who had appeased the NRA and then failed to contain it, resulting in their current predicament. When Okello arrived at Gulu on his flight from Kampala, Lieutenant Colonel Joseph Obonyo even proposed to execute the former president, but Bazilio Olara-Okello intervened and set Okello free. The latter promptly fled for Sudan, [16] where he told journalists that he no longer controlled the "5,000 [UNLA] troops holding out in northern Uganda". [10]
Bazilio Olara-Okello subsequently ordered a mass mobilization in Gulu and Kitgum. Everyone who could fight, including women and girls, was armed and provided with an ad hoc training. [12] Most of the draftees were between 18 and 27 years old, had attended secondary schools, and volunteered due to the belief that the NRA planning an Acholi genocide. Many of the new recruits also belonged to families with connections to the old security forces. [17] [a] The UNLA supplied the draftees with guns and machetes. [11] The UNLA forces thus prepared to make a stand along the Nile crossings, such as at Karuma, [11] [9] and some northern locations such as Lira. [11] Lieutenant Colonel Eric Odwar, head of the UNLA's Southern Brigade, was ordered to oversee the defenses' central axis at the Kampala–Gulu route, while Lieutenant Colonel Stevenson Ojukwu and Lieutenant Colonel John Kilama led the eastern UNLA troops at the Lira-Soroti-Mbale route. [19] Olara-Okello publicly declared that he would make a "last stand" at Gulu, vowing to fight to the end. [20]
In the immediate aftermath of the capture of Kampala, the NRA organized into three columns to conquer the rest of Uganda. An eastern section was ordered to advance to Jinja, Tororo, Mbale, Soroti, Lira, and finally Gulu, while a central force would directly march toward Gulu from Kampala. Finally, a western column under David Tinyefuza and Peter Kerim was supposed to move along the axis of Hoima, Masindi, and Karuma. [21] The NRA's operations were aided by the interal chaos of the UNLA, as many soldiers suffered from low morale due to the loss of the capital and focused on fleeing with their families as well as loot instead of organizing resistance. Tororo was largely plundered by fleeing troops. [22] Public support for the remaining UNLA loyalists began to suffer even in the north due to their widespread looting. [20] At Jinja, UNLA troops reportedly also engaged in internal clashes, as loyalists opened fire on soldiers who wanted to surrender to the NRA. [23] UNLA units of Langi ethnicity also rebelled, attacking Acholi soldiers across the northeast. They were joined by armed Karamojong who organized militias and hunted retreating Acholi forces. The Langi were motivated by a desire for revenge for their disempowerment after Okello had seized power in 1985. [24] The Karamojong were a nomadic people that maintained a strong sense of independence; [25] as a result of their traditional cattle raiding and opposition activities, the UNLA had repeatedly launched brutal punitive campaigns against Karamojong groups during the Bush War. [24] [26] Ambushes by Langi and Karamojong forces were reported around Moroto and Soroti. [24] Aided by these circumstances, the NRA's eastern force quickly seized Jinja and Tororo around late January and early February, [9] [21] as the local UNLA defenders largely fled or defected. [22] [27]
At this point, the UNLA high command organized a last counteroffensive, with Lieutenant Colonel Kenneth Kilama's Eastern Brigade attempting to retake Tororo. [9] This operation was partially motivated by the fact that eastern escape route of the UNLA had been blocked by Karamojong militias which had set up positions at the Awoja Bridge near Soroti.The eastern UNLA troops thus rallied, deciding to "return and fight back to Kampala". The counteroffensive and the NRA forces met each other at the River Manafwa, where a "bloody" [22] and "fierce" battle took place, [9] centered at the Manafwa Bridge on the Mbale-Tororo highway. UNLA troops also took up defensive positions in the swamps around the river such as at the Tororo-Busia road; there, they indiscriminately shot at and killed fleeing civilians. [22] The counteroffensive was eventually repelled, and the NRA's 11th Battalion managed to break through the UNLA defenses to cross the River Manafwa. Regardless, these clashes caused a minor delay in the NRA's preparations to assault the UNLA's remaining territories in the north. [9]
Meanwhile, the UNLA high command also opted for a "desperate move": It ordered one of its remaining helicopter gunships under to bomb the Ugandan parliament building when Yoweri Museveni was sworn in as president on 29 January. [19] [28] The operation aimed at killing the NRM/A leader and his lieutenants, and was personally planned by Bazilio Olara-Okello as well as Col. Obonyo, head of the Gulu Air Base. The UNLA commanders hoped that killing Museveni would throw his forces into chaos, turning the tide in the war. The mission was entrusted to Flight Captain Stephen Ojiambo and his co-pilot Lieutenant Andama who left Gulu in a Bell Textron military helicopter armed with a heavy machine gun and 38 missiles. However, the helicopter crew concluded that their mission was senseless as the war was lost; furthermore, the planned attack would likely result in high civilian losses due to the large crowd gathered at the parliament building. They thus aborted the attack, instead landing at Nakasongola Air Base and subsequently surrendered to the NRA at a nearby police post. [28] [b]
Meanwhile, the NRA resumed its offensive operations. [9] East of Tororo, the NRA initially encountered little firm resistance as the local population had traditionally supported Obote's old government and were thus hostile toward the UNLA. [29] Soon after Tororo had been secured, the NRA took the border towns of Malaba and Busia, restoring the traffic and trade route from Kenya to Kampala. [21] It then moved northward, where it drove the UNLA garrison from Mbale with a short artillery barrage around 1 February. The NRA soldiers reportedly found the town heavily looted, as the UNLA troops had killed 50 civilians, engaged in rape, and stolen much before fleeing. [29] [30] Part of the local UNLA garrison reportedly retreated with a train pulling several wagonloads of coffee and weapons toward Gulu. According to United Press International , "analysts said [the capture of Mbale] was the NRA's most significant victory since the taking of the capital". [30] The government forces then continued to march northward, capturing Soroti on 12 February. [29] [10] Afterward, the NRA force moved into the Lira and Apac Districts, evicting local UNLA troops and eventually pausing at Aloi on 25 February. It did so to coordinate further operations with the other NRA columns. [29]
The NRA's central column had captured Nakasongola Air Base around 2 February, causing the local UNLA defenders to flee to Kigumba. A few days later, the NRA's central and western groups linked up, [29] with David Tinyefuza assuming overall command. [31] They then attacked Kigumba on 5 February. After a short clash, the town fell to the attackers, [29] while the UNLA forces in the region rallied at the fortified Nile crossings. [29] [9] The NRA then began its assault to cross the Nile, encountering particularly heavy resistance by the UNLA and allied West Nile militias at Karuma and Kamdini. [12] After bitter fighting, the NRA's 13th and 19th Battalions managed to cross the Nile and advanced northward. [9] [c] As part of the battles along the rivers, the NRA inflicted "catastrophic losses" on the UNLA's Acholi troops [12] and largely shattered them. [9] Despite this, UNLA contingents continued some resistance efforts. In the Opaka forest, about 12 miles south of Gulu, a large force of new UNLA recruits armed with machetes attacked the NRA but were repelled, suffering heavy losses. [19]
The NRA's 1st, 13th, and 19th Battalions subsequently captured Gulu and Kitgum in early March. [9] [12] The circumstances of Gulu's fall are disputed. According to contemporary statements by the NRA Defense Ministry and Radio Uganda, its forces captured the town after defeating the local UNLA garrison in a battle lasting three hours on late 8 March. [20] [32] Researchers Anthony Clayton and Ondoga Ori Amaza insteasd stated that the NRA defeated a large UNLA force near Gulu in a three-day battle, [33] [29] whereupon the rest of the garrison fled to Sudan via Kitgum. [29] According to Colonel Samson Mande, head of the NRA troops at Gulu, the local UNLA garrison peacefully surrendered after negotiating with him. [31] Researcher Adam Branch claimed that the local UNLA garrison retreated without offering resistance. [18] The UNLA's eastern front also collapsed after a last, brief clash with the NRA near Lira in late March. Recognizing that his remaining forces suffered under low morale, Ojukwu ordered them to scatter at Puranga in the southern Kitgum District. [34]
With effective resistance no longer possible, the UNLA completely disintegrated and its remnants fled into exile, along with many former government officials. [9] The NRM claimed that at least 10,000 UNLA soldiers surrendered during the operations to capture the north. [10] However, most of the UNLA soldiers demobilized, hid their uniforms and weapons, and returned to their home areas. [34] [12] The last UNLA pockets of resistance had been defeated by the end of March. [18] The NRA continued its advance until it reached the state borders in the north, [12] [9] capturing Nimule at the Sudanese border on 28 March and Arua shortly after. [35] To the surprise of the locals in the north, the NRA troops initially behaved well and were disciplined as they occupied the region. [31] [36] As a result, a growing number of northern civilians began to offer support to the NRM/A. [20]
Even though the war appeared to be over, [37] high unrest remained common across Uganda. Many UNLA soldiers were unable or unwilling to return to civilian life, and started to operate as bandits. [38] Furthermore, some NRA units started to commit substantial abuses in the north, increasing the willingness of the local population to resist. Ultimately, local rebellions and the return of exiled insurgents plunged Uganda back into a civil war. [39]
The History of Uganda from 1979 to 1986 comprises the history of Uganda since the end of the dictatorship of Idi Amin. This period has seen the second rule of Milton Obote and the presidency of Yoweri Museveni since 1986, in which Ugandan politics have been dominated by the National Resistance Movement.
Tito Lutwa Okello was a Ugandan military officer and politician who served as the eighth president of Uganda from 29 July 1985 until 26 January 1986.
The Uganda People's Democratic Army (UPDA) was a rebel group operating in northern Uganda from March 1986 to June 1988.
Tororo is a town in the Eastern Region of Uganda. It is the main municipal, administrative, and commercial center of Tororo District.
The Nairobi Agreement was a peace deal between the Ugandan government of Tito Okello and the National Resistance Army (NRA) rebel group led by Yoweri Museveni. The accords were signed in Nairobi, Kenya in December 1985.
Justine Odong Latek was a Ugandan brigadier who served in the Uganda National Liberation Army (UNLA) during the Ugandan Bush War and later led the Uganda People's Democratic Army (UPDA) during the 1986–1994 war in Uganda.
David Oyite Ojok was a Ugandan military officer who held a leadership position in the coalition of Uganda National Liberation Army and Tanzania People's Defence Force which removed military dictator Idi Amin in 1979 and, until his death in a helicopter crash, served as the national army chief of staff with the rank of major general.
The Ugandan Bush War was a civil war fought in Uganda by the official Ugandan government and its armed wing, the Uganda National Liberation Army (UNLA), against a number of rebel groups, most importantly the National Resistance Army (NRA), from 1980 to 1986.
Kikosi Maalum, also known as the Special Battalion or the grand coalition, was a militia of Ugandan exiles formed in Tanzania to fight against the regime of Idi Amin. The unit was founded by and loyal to former Ugandan President Milton Obote, and served as his de facto private army. It was commanded by former army officers David Oyite-Ojok, and Tito Okello. Kikosi Maalum took part in the Uganda–Tanzania War, fighting alongside the Tanzanian military against Amin's forces. In course of this conflict, the militia was nominally unified with other Ugandan rebel groups, forming the Uganda National Liberation Army (UNLA) in 1979. After the fall of Amin's regime and Obote's return to power, Kikosi Maalum became the core of Uganda's new national army.
The Uganda People's Army (UPA) was a rebel group recruited primarily from the Iteso people of Uganda that was active between 1987 and 1992. The UPA was composed mostly of former soldiers in the special forces of the Uganda National Liberation Army and opposed the National Resistance Army (NRA) government of Yoweri Museveni, who took power in January 1986. Reaching a height after the widespread cattle raid by Karamojong in 1987, the UPA rebellion eventually ended through the mediation of the Teso Commission.
The 1985 Ugandan coup d'état was an ethnically motivated military takeover in Uganda involving dissident Acholi elements within the Uganda National Liberation Army (UNLA), led by Brigadier Basilio Olara Okello, which successfully ousted the second Milton Obote government. The army promptly named General Tito Okello Lutwa as President of the Military Council, only for him to be ousted six months later by Yoweri Museveni and his National Resistance Army (NRA).
The Battle of Kampala was a battle of the Ugandan Bush War that took place from 17 to 26 January 1986 in which forces of the National Resistance Army (NRA) attacked and captured the Ugandan capital, Kampala, from the Uganda National Liberation Army (UNLA). As a result, the Ugandan government was deposed and replaced by a new one under NRA leader Yoweri Museveni.
The siege of Masaka was a battle of the Ugandan Bush War that took place from 25 September to 10 December 1985 in which forces of the National Resistance Army (NRA) besieged and eventually captured the large Ugandan town of Masaka, from the Uganda National Liberation Army (UNLA).
From 1986 to 1994, a variety of rebel groups waged a civil war against the Ugandan government of President Yoweri Museveni. Most of the fighting took place in the country's north and east, although the western and central regions were also affected. The most important insurgent factions were the Uganda People's Democratic Army (UPDA), the Uganda People's Army (UPA), Alice Auma's Holy Spirit Movement (HSM), and Joseph Kony's army. Several smaller rebel factions and splinter groups of the larger movements waged their own campaigns; the rebels often clashed with each other. All belligerents, including the government, targeted civilians and committed human rights violations. In course of fighting that involved tens of thousands of troops, the Ugandan government was able to gradually defeat or contain most rebel factions. The operations in the north and east caused great destruction and resulted in high civilian casualties.
The Eastern Uganda campaign of 1979 was a military operation by Tanzanian forces and allied Ugandan rebels, most importantly the Uganda National Liberation Army, against Uganda Army (UA) troops loyal to Idi Amin during the Uganda–Tanzania War. The operation was launched by the Tanzania People's Defence Force (TPDF) on 15 April 1979 to secure eastern Uganda and oust UA remnants which were still active in the area. The TPDF mainly targeted the important towns of Jinja, Mbale, Tororo, Soroti, and Moroto. It encountered only sporadic resistance, as most UA soldiers focused on fleeing with loot instead of resisting, and successfully secured most of eastern Uganda. In the northeast, the collapse of the Uganda Army resulted in local Karamojong groups seizing much weaponry which would result in long-lasting security issues.
The Battle of Birembo was fought between National Resistance Movement (NRM) rebels and the Ugandan government, supported by North Korean forces, during the late Ugandan Bush War. In the clash, the government forces were almost able to encircle a strong insurgent force which included the NRM chief commander, Yoweri Museveni, but ultimately could not prevent a successful rebel breakout.
The Battle of Kakiri was a raid by Popular Resistance Army (PRA) rebels to capture weapons and ammunition at a military outpost in Kakiri during the early Ugandan Bush War. Kakiri was defended by a Uganda National Liberation Army (UNLA) contingent. The insurgents successfully overran the outpost and then tried to retreat with their loot. In the process, they chanced upon a Tanzania People's Defence Force (TPDF) patrol, killing several of its members. The PRA subsequently escaped into the bush, pursued by UNLA and TPDF troops. A few days later, one PRA contingent was attacked by a TPDF company and lost some of the weapons captured at Kakiri.
The Battle of Kembogo was fought between National Resistance Movement (NRM) rebels and the Ugandan government during the late Ugandan Bush War. After the government's Uganda National Liberation Army (UNLA) attempted to corner and destroy a major rebel force under Salim Saleh, the latter lured their pursuers into an ambush and inflicted a heavy defeat on them. The battle contributed to growing unrest among government forces.
Eric Odwar was an Ugandan military officer and rebel leader who successively served in the Uganda National Liberation Army (UNLA), Uganda People's Democratic Army (UPDA), and Holy Spirit Movement (HSM). He played a substantial role in the Ugandan Bush War, being one of the main counter-insurgency commanders of the government during this conflict. In 1985, he and other UNLA commanders overthrew the government of Milton Obote. A few months later, the National Resistance Army (NRA) won the Bush War, whereupon Odwar fled into exile and helped to organize a rebellion against the new Ugandan government. At first, he led a unit of the UPDA insurgent group, but later switched allegiance to the HSM. He was killed in combat in January 1987.
Joseph Obonyo was an Ugandan military officer and rebel leader. He initially served in the Uganda Army Air Force before joining the Uganda National Liberation Army (UNLA). He fought for the UNLA in the Uganda–Tanzania War and Ugandan Bush War. After the fall of Tito Okello's government and the UNLA's collapse, Obonyo joined rebel groups opposed to the government of Yoweri Museveni. He eventually went into exile in Great Britain.