Documentary filmmakers in Uganda were subjected to intimidation and coercion and were the victims of break-ins while attempting to film what a former U.N. official calls "Uganda's secret genocide" in the northern part of that country.
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Documentary filmmakers in Uganda were subjected to intimidation and coercion and were the victims of break-ins while attempting to film what a former U.N. official calls "Uganda's secret genocide" in the northern part of that country.
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Introduction
In June 2003, the then Presidential advisor on Political and Military Affairs in northern Uganda, Lt Gen Salim Saleh[1] unveiled a blue-print for ending the LRA insurgency with a price tag of Shs 4bn, entitled ‘Security and Production Programme’ (SPP).
On January 26, 1987, the NRM government made one year. Its leader, Gen. Yoweri Museveni, addressed the country on security, tribalism and economic policies. Below is the first part of a slightly edited speech, which also appears in the President’s book, What is Africa’s Problem?
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Northern Uganda is the worst place on earth to be a child today, says a former United Nations Under-Secretary General for Children in Armed Conflicts. According to Oxfam, the rate of violent death in northern Uganda is three times worse than Iraq's.
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In our story [see: Museveni’s NRA raped Acholi men in revenge] last week, we published serious allegations of how Museveni’s then NRA raped Acholi men in revenge. In this final part of our review, we bring you more allegations including one from an Acholi elder who said he was raped for nine days.
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