Essay sample library > Terrorism in Northern Uganda and Southern Sudan

Terrorism in Northern Uganda and Southern Sudan

2024-02-20 08:25:01

A national terrorist in northern Uganda and southern Sudan tried to escape, but he was caught. They gave him a bite of red pepper and five punched him. His hands were tied, then they killed him with us, another new prisoner of war. I feel sick. I knew this boy. We are from the same village. I refused to kill him, they told me they would shoot me. They pointed me with a gun, so I had to do it. The boy asked me: "Why are you doing this?" I said that I had no choice.

When they announced interest in peace talks in 2006, the Lord's resistance army threatened for 20 years in northern Uganda. These events are hosted by Juba of Sudan (now South Sudan) and are known as Juba's peace talks. At the same time, the Resistance Army of the Lord set up a camp to concentrate and store food in the Galamba National Park in the northeastern part of the Congo. During the peace talks, there is sufficient evidence that Conney ordered his soldiers to attack the village and kidnap the children of the Democratic Republic of Congo (Democratic Republic of the Congo). In August 2006, the Lord's resistance army and the Ugandan government signed an agreement to cease hostile actions. Consultation has been ongoing for two years. The delegation of Joseph Connie negotiated on behalf of him, but when Joseph Connie repeatedly signed the date of signing or will be present when the "final peace agreement" is ready to be signed I could not do it. Most notably, he did not appear in April 2008 and November 2008 to sign the "Final Peace Agreement" with the Ugandan government.

In 1987, Joseph Connie established the Lord's resistance army in northern Uganda, beat President Yoweri Museveni. In the early 1990s, the confrontation of the Lord's resistance forces spread to the border of Uganda and entered the eastern and central parts of South Sudan. Since 2006, the Lord's resistance army has further extended to the Democratic Republic of Congo, the Central African Republic and the western part of South Sudan. In the early 1990s, the Lord's resistance armies went into Sudan beyond Uganda's northern border. Kony was supported by the Sudanese government of Khartoum who was fighting the southern rebels. The end of the 2005 Sudanese civil war and this support was one of the main factors that ultimately allowed Kony to enter the negotiating table at Juba in South Sudan.

When Britain dominated Sudan as a colony, they managed the northern and southern states separately. The southern part is thought to be more similar to other East African colonies - Kenya, Tanganyika, Uganda - but northern Sudan is like Arabic in Egypt. Northern Arabs are forbidden to have traditional African power in the south and trade between the two regions is hindered. However, in 1946, the UK succumbed to the integration of the two regions into the northern pressure. Arabic became administrative in the south, people in the north started serving there. As they are excluded from their own government, Southern elite trained in English is dissatisfied with this change. After the colonization was over, most of the power was transferred to the northern elite of Khartoum, causing anxiety in the south. British people tend to give independence to Sudan, but they have failed to give enough power to the southern leaders