Context - History of the War

A Brief History of Uganda

The area of Africa now known as Uganda was first populated, perhaps around the time of Christ, by tribes belonging to the Bantu people group who migrated from southern Africa. The Bantu tribes established centralized kingdoms and fiefdoms below the Nile at about the same time that Queen Elizabeth 1 reigned in England. The Nilotic tribes entered the area from the north around the year 100 A.D. The Bantu tribes were hunter-gatherers. The Nilotic tribes were herder-farmers. Since they were from different people groups and their respective languages sprang from different roots, there was little intermingling between them.

Arab traders began moving inland from east Africa in the 1830s, followed in the 1860s by British explorers who were searching for the source of the Nile. In 1877, Protestant missionaries entered the area, followed by Catholic missionaries in 1879. The area was placed under the protectorate of the British Empire in 1888, through the charter of the British East Africa Company granted by the Bugandan king. The United Kingdom ruled Uganda as a protectorate from 1894 until Uganda’s independence in 1962, with the present geographic boarders being established in 1914.

Edward Muteesa II, King of Buganda, became Uganda’s first President and Commander-in-Chief of the armed forces after independence was declared in 1962. Four years later, Prime Minister Milton Obote led a coup that over-threw Muteesa and began a twenty year succession of coups and counter-coups. In 1971 the notorious Idi Amin took power and ruled the country by means of the military. His rule was ended in 1979 through another coup, but the damage to the land once known as “The Pearl of Africa” had already been done and it was devastating! The economy of Uganda was all but ruined when Amin expelled the entrepreneurial Indian minority from Uganda. Much of the financial and educational infrastructure was decimated when he, a Muslim, declared Uganda to be a Muslim nation (even though only approximately 3% of the population embraced that religion at the time) and began a campaign to eliminate Christian leaders and Jews.

In 1985, the current president, Yoweri Museveni, came in to power through a violent overthrow of the government. In spite of several major problems, such as becoming involved in the civil war in the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC) and other conflicts, widespread accusations of corruption and the on-going civil war with the insurgent group, Lord’s Resistance Army (LRA) in the north, Museveni has managed to retain power and some semblance of stability in Uganda for over 20 years. Anyone considering the history of Uganda must understand that political power in Uganda, and indeed much of Africa, has its roots in tribalism and witchcraft, with the inevitable result of chaos, killing and destruction.

The War in the North

Within eight months of Museveni taking power, an insurgency against his army began in the north. The Lord’s Resistance Army (LRA) was formed by Joseph Kony, who claims that his power and authority comes from spirits with whom he communicates. His relative, Alice Lukwena, led a short-lived rebellion a few years earlier. Calling herself “the holy spirit”, Lukwena’s forces were defeated by the Ugandan government and she fled into Kenya. (She died in 2007 and her body was returned to northern Uganda where it was buried.) Her father, known by his followers as ‘god, the father’, continues to operate an occult temple in Gulu. Kony claims to be a spirit-medium, and those who have had close association with him concur. He has taken the name “god, the son” and received his cultic power from the evil principalities and powers that inhabited several high places and alters in northern Uganda.

The modus operandi of the LRA has been to create fear and terror through the use of surprise raids on the civilian population during which many people are tortured, mutilated or murdered, homes are destroyed and property is stolen. The LRA is notorious for abducting children, some as young as 8 years old, and forcing them to become soldiers or sex-slaves. The United Nations has estimated that more than 30,000 children have been abducted by the LRA in its 21-year history. Other organizations put the number as greater than 60,000.

In 1991 the Ugandan military launched “Operation North”, arming local villages to combat the LRA. In retaliation, Kony massacred and mutilated many suspected government supporters among the Acholi population. During the ensuing years the LRA insurgency grew and became more violent. Families began to flee their villages and take up residence in Internally Displaced People (IDP) camps, established by the government to provide safety for the citizens of the north. As the attacks and abductions escalated over the next 7 years, 1.6 million people – 85% of the population – sought refuge and safety in the often squalid and dangerous camps.

In 1996 more than 200 LRA rebels attacked and raided St. Mary’s College (secondary school) in the town of Aboke, abducting 139 female students. At the risk of her life a teacher – a nun – pursued the rebels and negotiated for the release of 109 of the girls. However, she was unable to secure the release of them all. Of the 30 girls that remained with the rebels, many were given to LRA commanders as “wives” and many died in captivity. This incident was the first of several that focused the attention of the international community on the atrocities occurring in northern Uganda.

Until the “Aboke Girls” were abducted, the Christian community in the south had essentially ignored the situation in the north. But that abduction, which effected many Christian families in the south, forced them to face the issue and ignited the fires of intercession on behalf of the abducted girls and their families. These intercessory fires continue to burn today. Christian leaders in both the north and the south began investigating the situation from a spiritual perspective and realized the strongly occult foundation of the rebel group. This prompted a call for the Ugandan church to rise up and, through spiritual warfare, pull down the strongholds, alters and high places from which Kony was receiving his power. After this was done the tide began to turn in the battle against the LRA. Although the government’s “Operation Iron Fist” in 2002 resulted in escalation of fighting, the spiritual power fueling the LRA had been overcome and it was only a matter of time until that fact was seen in the natural world.

Following the spiritual warfare against Kony’s empowering spirits, international attention became increasingly focused on the situation in northern Uganda. In 2003 the United Nation’s top humanitarian official was quoted as saying, “I cannot find any other part of the world that is having an emergency on the scale of Uganda, which is getting so little international attention.” Additionally, the plight of the “night commuters” became known throughout the world. This rending of the veil of deception served to shine the spotlight of truth on the situation, raise a world-wide outcry and increase the pressure on both the government and the LRA to seek a solution. In 2005 the International Criminal Court issued arrest warrants for Kony and his 6 top commanders, citing crimes against humanity.

With the swelling tide of sympathy for the plight of the children caught in the web of political violence, the government of Uganda offered amnesty to any child soldier or captive that could escape and surrender. Thousands of children have taken this opportunity to escape from the evil of the LRA. After interrogation by the military, these children are taken to a rehabilitation center, such as World Vision’s Children of War Rehabilitation Center. There they are given psychological and spiritual counseling, deliverance ministry if necessary and, if they chose to believe in Jesus and follow Him, discipleship training. Often these returning young people have no family or home to return to; or they don’t know where their relatives are due to the mass migration of the population into IDP camps. Rehabilitation center staff assists in the effort to find some relatives or, failing that, to establish some sort of home for themselves.

Although LRA has almost disappeared in northern Uganda, they are fully active in the neighboring countries of D.R. Congo and Sudan. Intercessors and politicians, alike, continue to seek a final resolution to this 22+ year old conflict.

Possessing this good land…

Life in northern Uganda has changed drastically since a cease-fire was declared and peace talks began in September of 2006. Slowly, but steadily people have begun to rebuild their lives. In Gulu town one can see the old being restored and new shops, hotels, restaurants and banks being constructed. Roads and streets which were deserted a few months ago now swarm with activity at all hours of the day and evening. There is hope and a new confidence on the faces of the people here. And, while most of the people in the IDP camps have not yet ventured out to reclaim their rural villages and homesteads, there is real hope that the time is coming soon when they can leave the camps of war and repossess this good land in peace.

It will take courage and perseverance. It will take strength, both in the spiritual and in the natural. And, to possess the land peacefully and permanently, it will take the wisdom, grace and favor of God. To this end, believers are coming from southern Uganda and around the globe, standing with their brothers and sisters in the north to share the Gospel of peace, in word and deed. The harvest is ripe and it is massive. Pray the LORD of the Harvest to send laborers into His harvest field of northern Uganda to labor until Uganda is united in Christ, from north to south…east to west…and the Prince of Peace rules in this good land.

References:

1. Wikipedia.org/"Uganda"; 22 October 2006
2. BBC News: "Seeking Uganda’s Mysterious Rebels"; 19 October 2006
3. BBC News: "Profile-Ugandan Rebel Joseph Kony"; 17 October 2006
4. llafrica.com: "Displaced Civilians Venture Back Home";8 Dec. 2006
5. Wikipedia.org/"Lord’s Resistance Army"; 17 October 2006
6. "The War in Northern Uganda"; no author nor source given