A picture of a CV-22 Osprey, a decisive game changer.
US President Barrack Obama has ordered the deployment of an
additional 150 Special Forces and aircraft to boost the hunt for the
Lord’s Resistance Army rebel leader Joseph Kony in the thick jungles of
central Africa. The deployment comes just weeks after the US government
threatened to “review” its bilateral relations with Uganda after
President Museveni signed the law that criminalises homosexuality.
But the Public Affairs officer at American
Embassy, Mr Daniel Travis, told Drive Hot News yesterday that his
country can help protect both rights of LRA war victims and sexual
minorities.
“Ensuring justice and accountability for human
rights violators like the LRA and protecting LGBT rights aren’t mutually
exclusive. We can and must do both. We continue to look at additional
steps we may take to work to protect LGBT individuals from violence and
discrimination, and to urge Uganda to repeal this abhorrent law,” he
said.
The Uganda People’s Defence Forces welcomed the deployment of extra forces that brings the officially acknowledged number of American troops participating in the LRA hunt to 250.
The Uganda People’s Defence Forces welcomed the deployment of extra forces that brings the officially acknowledged number of American troops participating in the LRA hunt to 250.
“We have bilateral relations with the US to end
the LRA insurgency and we are still looking for him (Kony). We welcome
any extra effort that comes to help us end this problem,” UPDF
spokesperson Lt Col Paddy Ankunda, said yesterday.
Mr Travis said the deployment of CV-22 Osprey aircraft will enable quick troop movement in the war theatre.
Mr Travis said the deployment of CV-22 Osprey aircraft will enable quick troop movement in the war theatre.
“Our African partners have consistently identified
airlift as one of their greatest limiting factors as they search for
and pursue the remaining LRA leaders across a wide swath of one of the
world’s most remote regions,” he said. The Americans help the African
Regional Task Force that includes Uganda, South Sudan, Central African
Republic and DR Congo to gather intelligence on the LRA and its elusive
leader.
The Enough Project’s Ugandan researcher on LRA, Mr
Kasper Agger, yesterday observed that the CV-22 Osprey is “a decisive
game changer”. “The US and their African partner forces will now be able
to act swiftly to apprehend Kony who continues to terrorise civilians
in remote corners of central Africa. The deployment confirms US resolve
to the mission and sends a strong signal about the Obama
administration’s commitment to atrocity prevention,” he said.
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