The peace process with the talks between the Ugandan government and LRA seems to be on track. About 30 percent of the IDP population has moved from IDP camps to return sites and even 5 percent of them have gone back to their villages in Gulu district alone. According to UNHCR, about 55,000 IDPs have returned to their villages in Acholi, in addition to 431,000 who have gone back home to the Lango sub-region. Of those still in camps in Acholi, 359,000 people had by June moved to new sites, leaving 698,000 in former camps, compared with only 35,000 in camps in Lango by June.
The government has put in place an elaborate document dubbed Peace, Recovery and Development Plan for northern Uganda (PRDP), which is a national strategic frame work upon which all INGO,s working in the north operates within.
Almost all LRA’s have left northern Uganda and are converged in assembly points in Garamba forest in DRC and Rugkwamba in Sudan. On July 15, 07, the Chief of Defence Forces announced that ‘There had been no LRA soldier or activity for one whole year in Northern Uganda. There are no more ambushes on the Nimule-Juba road.’
Project Preparation
The two-person team has been very busy in July to meet with local and international groups in Uganda, both in Kampala and in the Gulu, Amuru, Kitgum and Pader Districts.
What they have found so far, after about half of their projected stay in the area, is that there is a need for a NP project in Northern Uganda provided NP would be able to raise the resources needed quickly enough. The ground at the moment is conducive to begin a civilian peacekeeping project in Uganda. Given the fact that the peace process is taking place in Juba in southern Sudan, the government of Uganda has requested development partners in the north to shift operations from emergency to recovery and reconstruction in terms of intervention.
Potential activities to start with in Northern Uganda
Report written by Oloo Otieno/ Shall Sinha and Christine Schweitzer (Programme Director)