A UPDF Soldier hunting for Kony in CAR under Operation Lightening Thunder. Photo by Matthias Mugisha
By In2EastAfrica Staff
US President Barack Obama has said he would prolong the mission of 100 US Special Forces helping Ugandan troops scour thick African jungles for rebel Lord’s Resistance Army (LRA) chief Joseph Kony.
Obama authorized the deployment last year to help hunt down Kony, one of the world’s most wanted fugitives whose rebels are notorious for abducting young children for use as sex slaves and soldiers and for mutilating their victims.
“This is part of our regional strategy to end the scourge that is the LRA and help realize a future where no African child is stolen from their family, no girl is raped and no boy is turned into a child soldier,” Obama said Monday.
The president said that after a review of the US deployment of the elite forces he had decided to extend their mission.
“Today I can announce that our advisers will continue their efforts to bring this madman to justice and to save lives,” Obama said in a speech at the US Holocaust Memorial Museum.
The US soldiers are backing up Uganda troops searching for traces of the LRA in an inhospitable 350-mile (400-kilometer) stretch of jungle in the far eastern corner of the Central African Republic.
By In2EastAfrica Staff
US President Barack Obama has said he would prolong the mission of 100 US Special Forces helping Ugandan troops scour thick African jungles for rebel Lord’s Resistance Army (LRA) chief Joseph Kony.
Obama authorized the deployment last year to help hunt down Kony, one of the world’s most wanted fugitives whose rebels are notorious for abducting young children for use as sex slaves and soldiers and for mutilating their victims.
“This is part of our regional strategy to end the scourge that is the LRA and help realize a future where no African child is stolen from their family, no girl is raped and no boy is turned into a child soldier,” Obama said Monday.
The president said that after a review of the US deployment of the elite forces he had decided to extend their mission.
“Today I can announce that our advisers will continue their efforts to bring this madman to justice and to save lives,” Obama said in a speech at the US Holocaust Memorial Museum.
The US soldiers are backing up Uganda troops searching for traces of the LRA in an inhospitable 350-mile (400-kilometer) stretch of jungle in the far eastern corner of the Central African Republic.
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