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Friday, March 30, 2012

Kony Video May Lead to Deeper Questions

08 kony blog Kony 2012: Inaccuracies aside, this is how to spread a messageAlthough Kony 2012 film largely deals with past events, it could prompt wider debate about justice.
I happened to be in Kitgum, one of the seven districts that make up the Acholi sub-region, in the same week that the Kony 2012 video was released.
This region, located in the far north of Uganda, on the border with South Sudan, was the area worst affected by the two-decade-long insurgency by the Lord's Resistance Army, LRA. Over a long period, LRA forces based in South Sudan used Kitgum district as an entry point to launch devastating attacks on the civilian population in Uganda.
But that was more than five years ago. Even so, the Ugandan government has broadly welcomed the film.
The reason I was in Kitgum was to report on a discussion on the future of the Amnesty Act, a piece of legislation passed by the Ugandan parliament 12 years ago to pardon people who had engaged in war or armed rebellion. Most of the beneficiaries of the law are former LRA rebels.
So it seemed fitting that Kitgum was where I first saw Kony 2012, a sleek video by the American charity Invisible Children which aims to make LRA leader Joseph Kony so notorious that governments will take action to apprehend him.
The film went viral and quickly attracted global attention; at the time of writing, more than 100 million people have finally viewed the 30-minute documentary.
As a charity, Invisible Children has built dormitories for schoolchildren, fixed water supplies in schools and sponsored disadvantaged children to go to university. But all that is dwarfed by the controversy surrounding Kony 2012.
Critics of the film point to a major disconnect between the message framed in the video and the current realities on the ground in northern Uganda.
For instance, camps for internally displaced persons, IDPs, in northern Uganda have been officially closed, and the government has said the region has moved into a "recovery and development phase". The film, meanwhile, seems to suggest there is an ongoing humanitarian crisis.
At the peak of displacement in northern Uganda, there were 251 IDP camps spread across 11 districts. So wretched was life in the camps that on a visit to northern Uganda in 2003, Jan Egeland, the United Nations under-secretary general for humanitarian affairs, described the conflict in northern Uganda as "the biggest forgotten, neglected humanitarian emergency in the world today".
At about that time, there were calls by some local leaders in northern Uganda for the government to declare a state of emergency in the region as a way of attracting from the international community. The government dismissed the suggestion outright. In doing so, it was in a sense rejecting international attention at the very time northern Uganda needed it most.
It is only now, more than a decade later, the government welcomed the spotlight that Kony 2012 has placed on the north. It is quite a turnaround.
In 2003, with about 1.8 million people displaced in the IDP camps, any international focus on the humanitarian situation in the north would have exposed the inability and failure of the Ugandan state to protect its citizens, at a time when the government wanted to create the impression that it was in full control.
Another reason is that as well as the LRA, the Ugandan army stands accused of gross human rights violations in the north. Opening the region to international scrutiny at a time when the authorities were not even fully in control of the camps they had set up - some massacres took place in these IDP facilities - would not have been to the government's advantage.
These days, the government's magic wand for northern Uganda is the Peace, Recovery, Development Programme, PRDP, a multimillion US dollar initiative funded by external donors and the state itself. PRDP was launched in October 2007, with implementation beginning in July 2008. Roads, health centres, police outposts and schools have been built under the initiative. Clearly, these are positive post-conflict achievements.
Why, then, would the government of Uganda be happy about a video that appears to suggest the north is still in the grip of a humanitarian crisis?
The answer is that unlike in 2003, the government now feels it is now totally in control of affairs in northern Uganda and can therefore allow and even welcome greater international attention. External interest will work in the government's favour as it looks for more funding for post-conflict recovery efforts both in this region and in other poor parts of Uganda.
The video continues to receive criticism from bloggers and journalists in Uganda. On March 13, an attempt to screen the video in Lira, in the Lango sub-region - another area affected by the LRA conflict - had to be stopped when things threatened to turn violent.
The reasons for such hostility could be because the video was not primarily meant for a Ugandan audience.
Irrespective of the video's weak points, it could yet lead to deeper questions being asked about what exactly happened in northern Uganda during the conflict, and who was responsible.
Outside interest may have come far too late, given that the crisis is over and reconstruction is moving ahead. But the victims of war are still crying out for justice. They might be the ultimate beneficiaries of Kony 2012.

 According to former European MP, journalist, and author Richard Cottrell, the Lord Resistance Army is backed by the CIA and Mossad.

The author of the blog aangirfan writes: "In Uganda, Joseph Kony is the leader of the Lord's Resistance Army, 'which is a US and Mossad-backed guerilla force.'" He quotes Richard Cottrell, a former European MP, journalist, and author of the book, "Gladio: NATO’s Dagger At The Heart of Europe," who wrote in an article in October 2011 called, "African ping pong: US plays both sides in Uganda":
"The Lord’s Resistance Army (LRA) rampaging around Uganda is nothing more than a US and Mossad-backed guerilla force.

Its task is to destabilize wide areas of Africa rich in minerals like Uganda, ex-French and Belgian Congo, and Sudan.

Joseph Kony, the self-appointed leader of the LRA, ex-choir boy, brilliantly flexible break dancer, the new US terrorist poster boy, has been on the CIA’s books for years."
Based on this analysis, the CIA is probably also involved in the million-dollar propaganda campaign to draw American people's attention towards Uganda, and Joseph Kony in particular, in order to secure public opinion in support of a U.S. and UN intervention in the country.
Another excerpt from Richard Cottrell's article: 
"What is going on in Central Africa is a fine old game of ping pong, the new scramble for Africa, in which western intelligence (American CIA, British MI6, Belgian intelligence, Israeli Mossad) are playing both sides of the table.

The aim is to destabilize the entire region so effectively that most of it can be effectively controlled under the disguise of the usual humanitarian mission. The vast mineral reserves (copper, diamonds, gold, uranium, and oil, for starters) can then he handed on a plate to western exploiters.

This is a direct continuation of the CIA/MI6/Belgian/Mossad promotion of the Katanga breakaway state back in the 1960′s. The western powers encouraged their local stooge Moise Tschombe to pull out of the freshly independent ex-Belgian Congo.

The prime minister of the Congolese Republic, Patrice Lumumba, was murdered in 1961 with the complicity of US and Belgian Special Forces."
One of the CIA agents who was involved in the illegal assassination of the Congolese leader Patrice Lumumba was Frank Carlucci, who was the Secretary of Defense in the Reagan administration in the late 1980s. After leaving office, he became the chairman of the infamous Carlyle Group from 1992 to 2003, a company that is linked to the Bush and Bin Laden families, as well as other nasty people.

These people are not only raping and murdering Africa, but they're raping and murdering America and pretty much the whole planet. They don't have human empathy, they are motivated by greed and want to take total control over the populations and resources of Earth.

The satanic international banksters who control the CIA, MI6, and other Western intelligence agencies are raping, killing, and looting in Afghanistan, Uganda, Iraq, Libya, America, etc. etc. etc.

The Kony 2012 campaign is a well-funded propaganda facade to lure good-hearted Americans into backing another illegal U.S./UN intervention in a part of the world that has been raped by cynical conquerors since the dawn of time.

This campaign is not about saving the children of Uganda from a heartless and brutal monster, but about stripping the resources of Uganda and giving them to the biggest heartless and brutal monsters on the planet, who own the CIA, MI6, Mossad, and the entire Western intelligence-security machine.

The author of the blog aangirfan writes:
"Kony's job is to provide the USA with the perfect excuse to invade Uganda on the pretext of inciting another humanitarian mission.

Yoweri Museveni, the dictator of Uganda, is also a CIA asset.

The CIA and its friends are supporting both sides."
If you care about humanity, and the people and children of Uganda, then you must denounce the cynical Kony 2012 campaign, and inform your friends and family members that the real killers who are massacring children across the planet are in the CIA, U.S. Military, Mossad, MI6, NATO, and UN.

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