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Viewing cable 06KHARTOUM2694, Sudan/Uganda/DRC: UN Humanitarian Chief Meets Head of

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Reference ID Created Released Classification Origin
06KHARTOUM2694 2006-11-19 08:29 2011-08-24 16:30 UNCLASSIFIED//FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY Embassy Khartoum
VZCZCXRO3166
PP RUEHROV
DE RUEHKH #2694/01 3230829
ZNR UUUUU ZZH
P 190829Z NOV 06
FM AMEMBASSY KHARTOUM
TO RUEHC/SECSTATE WASHDC PRIORITY 5270
INFO RUCNIAD/IGAD COLLECTIVE
UNCLAS SECTION 01 OF 02 KHARTOUM 002694 
 
SIPDIS 
 
SIPDIS 
SENSITIVE 
 
E.O. 12958: N/A 
TAGS: PREL PHUM SOCI PGOV UN SU UG CG
SUBJECT: Sudan/Uganda/DRC: UN Humanitarian Chief Meets Head of 
Lord's Resistance Army 
 
Ref: Khartoum 02666 
 
1. (U) SUMMARY:  Lord's Resistance Army LRA rebel chief Joseph Kony 
pressed for the withdrawal of Ugandan forces from Southern Sudan 
during a brief meeting with UN Under Secretary General (USYG) Jan 
Egeland on November 12 at the village of Nabanga on the Sudan-Congo 
border.  Kony refused Egeland's request to release captive women, 
children, and sick people to Egeland's custody.  Kony also told the 
press "there are no children" in the LRA.  Though Egeland admitted 
that the mood of the meeting was "tense" and "somber," he judged it 
a success and urged greater international support for ongoing peace 
talks.  The LRA delegation to the talks remained behind in Nabanga 
for further discussions with LRA leadership, as did mediators from 
the Government of Southern Sudan (GoSS) and the UN.  End Summary. 
 
------------------------------------------ 
LRA Leaders Want Security, UPDF Withdrawal 
------------------------------------------ 
 
2. (U) In an estimated 15-20 minute meeting with Egeland near the 
village of Nabanga on the Sudan-Congo border November 12, LRA chief 
Joseph Kony focused almost exclusively on security questions, 
complaining that the Uganda People's Defense Forces (UPDF) are not 
respecting the recently-renewed Cessation of Hostilities Agreement 
COHA).  Kony pressed for a complete UPDF withdrawal from Southern 
Sudan.  Egeland, who departed Juba the following day for a meeting 
with Ugandan President Yoweri Museveni in Kampala, later appeared to 
endorse the request, stating that "ideally" the UPDF should withdraw 
to the Ugandan border. 
 
3.  (U) LRA second-in-command Vincent Otti, who had a much longer 
meeting with Egeland prior to Kony's arrival at the site, also 
complained that UPDF deployments had prevented the LRA from 
gathering at the designated assembly areas of Owiny-Kibul (east of 
the Nile on the Sudan-Uganda border) and Ri-Kwangba (west of the 
Nile near the Sudanese village of Nabanga, and the site of the 
meeting with Egeland. 
 
4.  (SBU) Egeland described Kony as calm, coherent, and clearly in 
control.  Only Kony and Otti spoke to the visitors.  Kony listened 
to questions in English without translation and replied in Acholi. 
Arrangements for the meeting were "extraordinarily tense," Egeland 
said, and the LRA leaders were "the most paranoid I have ever seen" 
about their own security.  GoSS Vice President Riek Machar, chief 
mediator in the peace talks, accompanied Egeland to the meeting and 
acquiesced in an LRA demand that all armed elements - including 
Egeland's personal protection detail -- maintain a distance of 100 
meters from the discussion site.  Egeland's security detail also 
relinquished their weapons during the meeting, and participants were 
required to remove body armor. 
 
5.  (U) Near the end of the meeting with Kony, Otti asked Egeland to 
help persuade the International Criminal Court (ICC) to lift the 
indictments against Kony, Otti, and two other LRA commanders. 
Egeland said he told the LRA leaders that the ICC is an independent 
body over which he has no direct influence.  He urged the LRA to 
remain committed to the peace talks and to comply with current 
agreements, which would improve the LRA's international image. 
 
---------------------------- 
Complaints About Food, Water 
---------------------------- 
 
6.  (U) Otti complained that food provided by the GoSS at the 
Ri-Kwangba assembly point was rotting, and UN officials confirmed 
separately that there is no adequate water supply at the site. 
Egeland outlined detailed plans to provide humanitarian assistance 
at the site.  The Catholic relief organization Caritas, through its 
Uganda office, has received funding to supply humanitarian 
assistance at Ri-Kwangba, Egeland explained.  In his separate 
briefing of diplomats, Egeland admitted that there is not 
significant LRA presence at either of the designated assembly 
points 
"per se," but said LRA units are in the vicinity of both locations. 
 
------------------------------ 
UNMIS Will Assist, MONUC Won't 
------------------------------ 
 
7.  (SBU) Egeland and a delegation of 60 persons flew to the meeting 
site in three UNMIS helicopters.  Egeland subsequently announced 
that "UNMIS has agreed to provide logistical support" to the 
Cessation of Hostilities Monitoring Team (CHMT) set up under the 
COHA.  UNMIS officials in Juba had earlier balked at providing such 
assistance, citing directives from UN headquarters in New York. 
Asked whether MONUC could help monitor LRA activities in DRC, or 
prevent the dispersal of LRA units away from Garamba National Park 
(where Kony and Otti are believed to be based), Egeland said MONUC 
officials have told him they "have nothing close to this capacity." 
There had once been an effort by the United States and others to 
persuade MONUC and UNMIS to assist in apprehending LRA leadership, 
 
KHARTOUM 00002694  002 OF 002 
 
 
Egeland said, but "this is no longer the focus."  The LRA still pose 
a military threat, Egeland emphasized.  He estimated total LRA 
strength, "including captives," at 5000 people.  The LRA remain 
"incredibly effective as a terror producer and as an armed militia." 
 He had consulted with colleagues in MONUC, Egeland said, who were 
"impressed with how mobile and how well armed the LRA is."  LRA 
units are "scattered," Egeland said, but retain "central command 
structure" and "take orders." 
 
---------------------- 
No Release of Captives 
---------------------- 
 
8.  (U) Prior to his face-to-face meeting with LRA leadership, 
Egeland had pressed for the release of an unspecified number of 
women, children, and sick people.  In what Egeland admitted were 
"sometimes heated" telephone conversations ahead of the meeting, 
Otti had already made it clear that no captives were likely to be 
released.  Kony confirmed this during his discussion with Egeland, 
and later told the press there are "no children" in the LRA. 
However, Egeland noted, one LRA combatant is currently receiving 
medical attention in Juba with the approval of the GoSS, and such 
initiatives might continue.  Egeland also raised the issue of 15 
girls from the Nabanga area who were abducted by the LRA in February 
and March 2006.  He said the LRA leadership had no direct response 
concerning these girls.  Egeland said the LRA leaders agreed to 
continue the dialogue about the potential release of captives and 
provide a final answer to his request in about a month. 
 
------------------------------------------ 
Accentuating the Positive, Seeking Support 
------------------------------------------ 
 
9.  (SBU) Egeland accentuated positive aspects of the current peace 
process in his meeting with the LRA, private briefings in Juba, and 
remarks to the press.  He also warned of the potential "catastrophe" 
should talks break down.  Hundreds of thousands of IDPs in northern 
Uganda have returned to their homes since the talks began, Egeland 
said, and there have been "no major attacks" since last August. 
"Everyone I talk to" says the LRA are not responsible for recent 
violence east and south of Juba, Egeland said.  There were doubts 
about the peace initiative when it began, but this genuinely 
"African-led" process has drawn wide international support.  He 
urged donors to deliver quickly on their pledges, and provide 
additional assistance. 
 
10.  (U) Egeland said there were $4.7 million in pledges so far for 
the Juba Initiative Fund, both to support the current peace talks 
and fund related initiatives.  The "talks would have broken down" 
had donors not intervened to pay three months of accumulated hotel 
bills, Egeland claimed.  The Netherlands, Germany, Norway, Sweden, 
the United Kingdom, and Canada have all made pledges, Egeland said, 
and Ireland, France, and Italy have signaled the intent to 
contribute.  A European Commission representative at Egeland's 
briefing said her organization was also likely to provide 
assistance. 
 
--------------------------------------- 
Mediators, LRA Delegation Remain Behind 
--------------------------------------- 
 
11.  (U) Most of the LRA delegation to the current peace talks 
traveled to Nabanga with Egeland, but remained behind after he left. 
 They and a small group of GoSS and UN mediators want to consult 
further with LRA leadership and develop a clearer LRA response to 
current proposals for a protocol addressing "root causes" of the LRA 
conflict.  Egeland and others in the November 12 meeting with Kony 
and Otti noted that neither leader raised any of the issues that 
have preoccupied the talks for weeks, including federalism, 
reparations, and the creation of a new government ministry for 
northern Uganda.  The remainder of the group that traveled to 
Nabanga is due to return to Juba on November 15.  Several 
international journalists also remained in Nabanga seeking further 
opportunities to interview Kony and report on LRA activities. 
 
HUME