Photo: Courtesy of UPDF. ADF leader James Mukulu with senior commanders in eastern DRC (file photo)
Source: IRIN
Ugandan rebel leader’s arrest a shot in the arm for justice
Kampala, 30 April 2015 (IRIN) - The announced arrest in Tanzania of the
leader of one of the longest-standing insurgencies in Africa’s Great
Lakes region marks a step forward for justice and accountability but is
unlikely to bring an end to the transnational network he leads.
Jamil Mukulu, 51, who heads the Allied Democratic Forces (ADF),
a partly Islamist grouping of Ugandan origin formed in 1989 and now
based in eastern Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC), was arrested in
Tanzania earlier this month. Uganda is seeking his extradition in order
to prosecute him in the International War Crimes Division of its High
Court.
A senior Ugandan army official who asked not to be named because of
protocol considerations confirmed to IRIN that the detained man was
Mukulu, who has been subject to an international arrest warrant since
February 2011.
“We hope the extradition modalities will be completed soon. He
committed various atrocities in Uganda and DRC. He has to face justice,”
Henry Okello, Uganda’s state minister for international affairs, told
IRIN.
Interpol’s Uganda director Asan Kasingye said DNA tests would be conducted to make certain the arrested man was Mukulu.
Interpol issued a red notice for Mukulu in connection with the June
1998 Kichwamba Technical Institute massacre in the western Ugandan
district of Kabarole, in which about 80 students were killed. He also
faces charges of human rights abuses, kidnapping and recruitment of
minors in both Uganda and DRC.
In January 2014, the DRC army began operations aimed at neutralizing
the ADF, whose local and regional business interests include motorcycle
taxis, logging and gold mining.
In late 2014, the ADF was blamed for a spate of killing sprees in Beni Territory of eastern DRC’s North Kivu province that claimed the lives of some 250 men women and children.
Mukulu’s arrest has been welcomed in Uganda, but with caveats. Here’s a sample of reactions.
Stephen Oola, programme manager, conflict, transitional justice and governance at Uganda’s Makerere
University’s Refugee Law Project
“The arrest of Jamil Mukulu is a welcome development to the people of
Uganda and in particular the population in western part of the country
and the greater Rwenzori sub-region who bore the brunt of the ADF
insurrections.”
The arrest “opens a new chapter for accountability for war crimes and
crimes against humanity given [a] recent decision of the Supreme Court
…which implies that an insurgent like Jamil who has been arrested can no
longer benefit from amnesty.”
“Our hope is that his arrest translates into meaningful justice for
the multitude of victims and survivors of this atrocious war.”
Jason Stearns, Congo Research Group at Center on International Cooperation, New York University
“If it is true that Mukulu has been arrested, this will be a huge
blow to the ADF. Mukulu has been at the head of the organization for two
decades and is its uncontested figurehead.
“This [arrest], along with a strong military offensive by the
Congolese army will reduce the group to a shadow of itself. However, I
doubt that this is the end of the ADF.
“Over its history, with Mukulu at its helm, the ADF has engaged in
crimes against humanity, including burning dozens of students to death
in Kabarole district in 1998. His group is also the main suspect for the
massacre of over 300 people around Beni since October. Putting Mukulu
to trial could not only provide some comfort for victims, but also could
shine light on one of the most opaque insurgencies in the region.”
Thierry Vircoulon, International Crisis Group project director Central Africa
“This trans-border armed group requires serious regional intelligence
investigations to be dismantled instead of military operations.
“The ADF is living thanks to trans-border trafficking between Uganda
and DRC that extends its ramifications in East Africa. The DRC
government chose the war path instead of choosing the intelligence path
and, as a result, it is back to square one in 2015. The ADF are back to
the area where they operated before and they are still murdering
innocent villagers.
“The arrest of Jamil Mukulu should be followed by very serious
investigations to identify his support network from the DRC to Tanzania
and Kenya. The intelligence approach is the best way to understand the
local and regional nexus behind these armed groups and to neutralize
them.”
Christoph Vogel, Associate Lecturer, Institute for African Studies, University of Cologne
“Once confirmed by the Ugandan and Tanzanian authorities that the
suspected individual is Jamil Mukulu, it will be crucial to understand
his attempt to flee. While ADF has been weakened significantly and
divided in the past months, there was no major indication he [Mukulu]
has been dismissed from power over the group’s military wing or … its
politico-spiritual council.
“Mukulu’s odyssey to Tanzania can either mean that he has been sacked
by his own troops or that at least the wing under his command is simply
too decimated to keep up."