Victimisation and challenges to integration: Transitional justice response to children born of war in northern Uganda

B. Nanyunja
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Abstract

Uganda witnessed one of its worst conflicts between 1986 and 2007. The conflict in northern Uganda was between the government troops and the Lord’s Resistance Army (LRA). Serious crimes were committed against the civilian population. Women and girls were abducted by the rebels to serve as sex slaves and children were born as a result. After the conflict, these children’s integration has not been well received by their communities. It has not been properly addressed by the state operatives either. The children are dismissed as perpetrators of the conflict. Their return has been marred with stigmatisation and ostracism, forcing them to live on the margins of society. After the conflict, a National Transitional Justice Policy was passed. The overarching framework aims at addressing justice and reconciliation through inter alia social reintegration. However, it leaves an accountability gap. The framework largely departs from the needs of this particular community: acknowledging their existence and integration. The purpose of this article is to identify transitional justice opportunities and how these accommodate and advance accountability, integration and reconciliation in addressing victimisation concerns of the war children. Ultimately, it argues that addressing the abuses of the affected communities will ease social [re]integration.
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受害和融合的挑战:对乌干达北部战争中出生的儿童的过渡司法反应
乌干达在1986年至2007年间经历了最严重的冲突之一。乌干达北部的冲突发生在政府军和圣主抵抗军之间。对平民犯下了严重罪行。妇女和女孩被叛军绑架成为性奴隶,儿童因此而出生。冲突结束后,这些儿童的融入并没有得到社区的欢迎。政府工作人员也没有妥善解决这个问题。这些孩子被认为是冲突的肇事者。他们回国后受到歧视和排斥,被迫生活在社会的边缘。冲突结束后,通过了《国家过渡时期司法政策》。总体框架旨在通过除其他外的重新融入社会来解决正义与和解问题。然而,它留下了一个问责缺口。该框架在很大程度上偏离了这个特定社区的需求:承认它们的存在和整合。本文的目的是确定过渡时期的司法机会,以及这些机会如何适应和推进问责制、融合与和解,以解决战争儿童受害问题。最后,报告认为,解决受影响社区的虐待问题将有助于社会[再]融合。
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Comment: Telephonic entrapment Recent Case: General Principles and Specific Offences Defining the contours of a ‘criminal gang’ and a ‘pattern of criminal gang activity’ under the Prevention of Organised Crime Act Victimisation and challenges to integration: Transitional justice response to children born of war in northern Uganda Covid-19-related criminalisation in South Africa
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