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Irish Priest is shot dead in Uganda

category national | miscellaneous | news report author Saturday March 23, 2002 10:02author by JoramReport this post to the editors

An Irish Missionery gets killed by unknown gunmen in Uganda
1220_1.GIF

Gunmen yesterday killed an Irish Catholic priest, the Rev. Fr. Michael Otoole Declan , his driver, Patrick Longoli and his cook, Fidele Longole.Declan was attached to the Panyangara Catholic Parish, Kotido(Uganda). He was ambushed at Kalosaric, three kilometres from a UPDF(Uganda Army) barracks on Moroto-Kotido road. Declan had travelled to Moroto(NE uganda) to renew his driver’s permit and left for Kotido late in the evening.

The gunmen stopped the vehicle and killed all of them on the spot. Karamoja Regional Police Commander Joseph Opio said, “The priest and his workers were killed yesterday. I have just got a radio message from Kotido Police confirming the incident.” Opio also said another vehicle, UAA 40 2Y belonging to the Church of Uganda, Karamoja, which was travelling from Kotido, was also ambushed at the same spot. The driver, William Okot, refused to stop and the thugs riddled his vehicle with bullets.

Okot, now admitted to Matany Hospital, was shot through the back and sustained multiple injuries.
Moroto local chief Terence Achia was horrified by the news. “How can I work with all these continuous atrocities. Government machinery is failing me because we are supposed to make immediate follow-up of these criminals.”

Meanwhile a UPDF Captain has gone missing in southern Sudan following the Wednesday raid on Sudan People’s Armed Forces (SPAF) units in Nisitu and Jabeni by Kony rebels(Uganda Christian Fundamentalists Forces)), the army said yesterday.
that the unidentified officer was one of half a dozen UPDF(uganda Army) liaison officers in Sudan government-held areas of southern Sudan. The officers were overseeing the implementation of the protocol Uganda and Sudan signed in Khartoum on March 5. The protocol empowered the UPDF to pursue Kony rebels inside Sudan.

“The officer is missing. We suspect he may be in the jungles along with other Sudanese government soldiers. He could also be heading towards rebel SPLA controlled parts of Sudan,” army spokesman Major Shaban Bantariza said yesterday.
The missing officer was a colleague of the UPDF’s Fourth Division public relations officer, Capt. Khelil Magara, who died of shock and heart attack as he fled a Kony attack near Juba town on Wednesday. Magara, who had a heart disease, first went into a coma. He died for lack of medical attention.
Other UPDF liaison officers are said to be safe, but as many as 20 SPAF soldiers are still missing.

Khelil Magara is the second UPDF officer to die in Sudan in less than a month. An unidentified captain and two other soldiers were killed on March 1 while pursuing Uganda rebels inside Sudan.
On March 23, rebels raided Agoro sub-county in Lamwo county in Kitgum.

The territory about 50kms southwest of Juba city is controlled by Sudan People’s Liberation Army (SPLA) who have been forced to declare a ceasefire with Sudan government to allow the protocol to work.
In the LRA(Lords Resistance Army) raid, SPAF lost a colonel, a major and lieutenant along with nearly two dozen soldiers. Nine rebels were killed.
The attack was the first significant clash between LRA and their former mentors. Sudan government has financed, trained and protected LRA for years.
On March 5, the United Nations Children’s Fund (UNICEF) issued a statement saying the LRA has abducted nearly 10,000 children from northern Uganda and herded them to Sudan to be used as soldiers or sex slaves and porters. Thousands of them are believed to have died in captivity.
A registration system supported by UNICEF put the number of abducted children missing at 5,555.

author by jorampublication date Mon Mar 25, 2002 19:39author email joram at myplace dot comauthor address author phone Report this post to the editors

Two Ugandan soldiers could face the death penalty if found guilty of the murder of an Irish Catholic priest during an ambush just kilometres from his parish in the Karamoja subregion, northeastern Uganda.

"A field court martial has already started at the locality, and is being overseen by army lawyers appointed by the Commander-in-Chief [President Yoweri Museveni]," Ugandan army spokesman Shaban Bantariza told IRIN on Monday.

The soldiers are accused of shooting dead Father Declan O'Toole, his driver and a passenger in an ambush as they travelled along the Moroto-Kotido road, at around 6 pm local time on Thursday 21 March.

According to Bantariza, O'Toole was just a few kilometres from his parish of Panyangela, near Kotido, when the attack took place.

Bantariza told IRIN that, if found guilty, the two men could face execution by firing squad.

"According to our laws, the sentence for murder is death," Bantariza said. "They would put the boys on a tree and shoot them."

The two Uganda People's Defence Force (UPDF) soldiers were named by The New Vision government-owned newspaper as Corporal James Omediyo and Private Abdullah Muhammad.

Armed cattle raiding by Karamojong pastoralists in the northeastern districts of Kotido and Moroto, has made the area one of the most insecure in Uganda. The insecurity caused by such raids has caused the displacement of some 80,000 people to "protected camps" in neighbouring Katakwi District alone, the United Nations Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs reported in October 2001.

A two-month arms amnesty in Karamoja expired on 15 February, after which the UPDF began a forcible disarmament campaign to recover an estimated 30,000 illegal guns still in circulation.

O'Toole had been beaten earlier in the month by government soldiers, after he accused them of using excessive force while searching residents of Panyangela for weapons, the BBC quoted local media as saying.

According to Bantariza, 1,153 guns had so far been recovered since 22 February, in addition to the 7,676 handed in during the period of voluntary disarmament.

On 6 March, Uganda's newspapers reported the deaths of the chairman of Kapedo sub-county in Kotido District and a prominent businessman, allegedly beaten up and tortured by Ugandan soldiers, who wrongly accused them of not surrendering their arms.

The New Vision quoted Ael Ark Lodou, an area MP, as telling news reporters in the Ugandan capital, Kampala, that the bodies of the two "prominent people" had been recovered on 25 February in Ugandan army trenches. The Ugandan army said at the time that four security personnel had been arrested in connection with the incident.

The strength of UPDF forces deployed in the disarmament exercise meant the Karamojong were unlikely to forcibly resist removal of their weapons, Bantariza said on Monday. "They cannot fight us, we have too many soldiers. A whole division of several thousand soldiers is being used," he said.

"The disarmament programme is going on well, everyone is cooperating. In a few months, I think it will be over," he predicted.

 
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