The talks between the Ugandan government and the Lord's
Resistance Army (LRA) aimed to end the 20-year conflict in northern
Uganda entered the third day Sunday in Juba, southern Sudan, after
serious talks failed to get underway on Saturday as earlier
expected.
"The statement was offensive, instead of calling for peace," a
member of the government delegation was quoted by Sunday Monitor as
saying, referring to the LRA's strong opening statement at the
peace talks on Friday, in which it described the Museveni
administration as "an ethnic-based regime."
The Ugandan government side consequently asked the southern
Sudan, who initiated the talks, to "make a specific response to the
LRA statement," said Robert Kabushenga, the head of the Media
Center in Kampala.
After a long meeting with southern Sudan authority, the Ugandan
side issued its response in a statement, saying the Ugandan
government "came under undue, unwarranted, and unfair attack from
the LRA delegation."
"The LRA used the opportunity to whitewash itself of the
atrocities they have committed on the people of northern Uganda and
Southern Sudan," the statement said.
The LRA raised harsh criticism of the government's region policy
for northern and eastern Uganda in its statement signed by team
leader Martin Ojul.
"They did all they did so that government could behave like an
angry child and run away from Juba but we did not react to those
provocateurs," the statement added.
Ugandan side top negotiator, Internal Affairs Minister Ruhakana
Rugunda said the talks will resume on Sunday at 2:30 PM at
Jubaraha Hotel.
As part of the talks, LRA leader Joseph Kony, who was absent
from the talks for fear of his security, wanted to meet cultural
and political leaders from the north and the east in Garamaba
National Park, northeast DR Congo.
He also wanted the Ugandan government to help provide tents,
chairs and food, but all the requests were not responded yet.
(Xinhua News Agency July 17, 2006)