Photo: Charles Akena/IRIN. A counsellor takes LRA returnees through a session at a rehabilitation centre in Gulu, Northern Uganda
Source: IRIN
GULU, 18 January 2013 (IRIN) - One of the only two remaining reception
centres in northern Uganda helping reintegrate former members of the
Lord’s Resistance Army (LRA) is threatened with closure. This would
greatly reduce psychosocial support available to those directly involved
- often as a result of abduction - in one of Africa’s longest-running
conflicts.
“We are considering closing our reception centre by March this year, but
we hope to continue supporting these children outside the centre and
other communities in [the] north through our child protection, health,
education and livelihood programs ,” Paddy Mugalula, World Vision’s
programme manager in Gulu, told IRIN.
Since 1994, the two rehabilitation centres, the World Vision Reception
Centre and the Gulu Support the Children Organization (GUSCO), have
attended to some 25,000 abductees and former fighters, according to
their managers. They are the only centres still in operation, out of an
initial six.
“There will be a problem with the reintegration of [adult] male
returnees since our reception centre handles only children and women,”
Robert Okeny, GUSCO’s program director, told IRIN.
Critical services
Among the services offered at these centres are assessment and treatment
for trauma, post-traumatic stress disorder, depression, anxiety and
sexually transmitted diseases.
These are serious concerns among demobilized LRA members. A 2008 study
of former LRA child soldiers found that more than half exhibited
symptoms of post-traumatic stress distress, concluding that there is an
unmet need for psychological services.
Returnees are also normally provided material support like farm implements, cooking utensils, blankets and mattresses.
The centres also provide follow-up support to the reintegrated
returnees, through training programmes in construction, tailoring,
mechanics, baking and small business skills, to improve their ability to
engage in productive, civilian work. Even after their reintegration,
many returnees - especially girls and women who returned with young
children - have continued using the centres as points for referral to
access support from other agencies.
The positive role these reception centres play in reintegrating former LRA members into their communities is well documented.
“Available evidence emerging, with respect to the impact of centres on
children’s rehabilitation and reintegration in Northern Uganda, suggest
that children who spent time in centres have better mental health and
psychosocial well-being compared to children that are returned directly
to communities,” a report by the Institute for Security Studies said.
Lack of funds
Managers of the rehabilitation centres say this and previous closures
have been occasioned by a lack of funds. Operating the centres is
expensive, and though they continue to provide important services, just a
handful of new returnees are currently being received.
“We are [concerned] because these centres are still relevant and doing
the good work of receiving, counselling and even treating the injured
children and older returnees, and engaging communities deep in villages
to help them forget and foster amicable co-existence with these people
[former rebels] who once tormented them,” said Mathew Alobi, a local
leader in Bobi Sub-county in Gulu District.
According to the locals, the rehabilitation centres have always
facilitated the first contact between returnees and the community.
“When we talk about the LRA reception centres, we are talking of
children returning from the LRA, so everything here counts if we are to
win the confidence of these affected persons,” Daniel Kibat, a local
leader, noted.
“What do you think those rebels out in the bush will imagine if they hear that centres are closing?” he asked.
Patrick Ojok, one of the returnees, told IRIN he would find it hard to
go back to his community without the aid of a reception centre. Without
rehabilitation, he said he would rather seek “military work in the
Uganda People’s Defence Force as a soldier because I see no other way
out” of military life.
The LRA continues to abduct people in the Democratic Republic of Congo
and the Central African Republic, with 66 abductions recorded between
July and September 2012, 20 percent of them children, according to the
UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs.
Often, the abductees work as porters, sex slaves or fighters. Many of them find it hard to rebuild their lives upon return.