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Watch part two
When Callum MacCrae first visited Northern Uganda in 2003, the war between the government and the Lord's Resistance Army (LRA) had been raging for 17 years.
The LRA was ruling through a terrifying mixture of brutality, fear and 'mystic' power but few in the West had heard of the conflict.
If the LRA had been stealing oil rather than children - more than 90 per cent of the LRA rebels were abducted children - perhaps the world would have paid more attention?
MacCrae has returned to Northern Uganda as it struggles with a fraught peace process involving the LRA, the Ugandan government and the International Criminal Court (ICC).
Some of those displaced during the war are tentatively returning to their villages, although most remain in the displacement camps.
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| Callum MacCrae returns to Uganda to talk to those he first met during the height of the war |
Many rebels are also starting to return home to the villages they once terrorised - the problem of integrating these young men and women who grew up as fighters in this brutal rebellion are only just beginning.
In this film MacCrae talks to those he first met at the height of a war.
For years, the West ignored this war but now the ICC, on the invitation of the Ugandan government, has indicted the leaders of the LRA for war crimes.
In response, the LRA have made the dropping or suspension of action by the ICC a condition of any peace deal with the government.
They have said that they are willing to accept traditional mechanisms of justice as practiced by the Acholi people of Northern Uganda. It is a system based on reconciliation and forgiveness.
If the peace talks fail because the ICC and the rest of the world deem traditional Acholi justice insufficient, it may be the final betrayal for the people of Northern Uganda.
This episode of People & Power aired from Tuesday, December 30, 2008.
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Number of comments : 2 |
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matt sprouse
United States |
22/08/2008 |
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us elections evil? |
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the whole concept of evil in US politics is based on pulling the emotional strings of voters , this is the climate we live in. it cant be ignored. |
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Simon
United Kingdom |
20/08/2008 |
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The Final Betrayal |
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I watched the final betrayal program about the conflict in northern Uganda and the recent peace process.
The program quite rightly highlighted the suffering of the Acholi people at the hands of the rebel Lords Resistance Army, however it overlooked or missed the role of the government of Uganda who have also caused immense suffering by adopting counterinsurgency strategies that have resulted in more loss of life than the brutality of the LRA. |
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