Ugandan faith leaders critique viral Internet video on Kony
Ugandan faith leaders critique
viral Internet video on Kony
Here is an alternative veiw to the Kony YouTube sensation.
I wonder why we always look for a military solution?
Posted On : March 15, 2012 10:24 AM | Posted By :
ACNS:
A film detailing atrocities committed by the Northern
Uganda rebel leader Joseph Kony has become an Internet sensation, but faith
leaders in the region said they fear the production will cause further trauma
to the population who are recovering from a 23-year brutal war.
The 30-minute film, titled "Kony 2012," was
released on 5 March by Invisible Children, a charity based in San Diego,
California. It has put fresh global attention on atrocities committed by the
Ugandan rebel group called the Lord's Resistance Army, but also attracted
praise and criticism from faith leaders, the conflict's victims and the public.
"While it publicizes the problem, we see it as
being outdated. It should have been released in 2003 ... but now that it is
drawing a new attention to the problem, we would like the international
community to find ways of stopping Kony. He is still there," Anglican
Bishop Johnson Gakumba of Northern Uganda diocese told ENInews in a telephone
interview on 14 March from the town of Gulu.
"Our proposal is dialogue, since we believe the
military option will not help," added Gakumba, also the chairperson of the
Acholi Religious Leaders Peace Initiatives (ARLPI), an interfaith peace and
transformation group which has been responding to the conflict since 1997.
Within a week of its unveiling on the Internet, the
film has been viewed 78 million times (and counting) on Youtube with more than
three million people sharing it on Facebook.
"Our concern is that it reminds us of war when
the people were starting to recover. The reminder is likely to traumatize those
who were affected. We are concerned it sends a different message of war and
appeals to a military option to end the conflict. Our view is peace
negotiations are the best option," said Sheikh Musa Khalil, the Kadhi of
the Muslim region of northern Uganda in an interview.
The film tells the story of the rebel leader's brutal
tactics through the eyes of a former child soldier named Jacob. It then calls
on viewers to help "make Joseph Kony famous" so that he can be
stopped.
But the ARLPI said its members watched it hoping to
find peaceful solutions to the conflict, only to find sensational messages.
"It lacks the current facts of the LRA activities. It misrepresents the
current situation on the ground and is full of over simplified
justifications," said the statement.
In Uganda, Kony is viewed as the signature face of
horror and terror. "Why then was his file being reopened when he seemed to
be at his weakest?" queried John Abimanyi in a 12 March Monitor Newspaper
review.
The film, whose purpose is to promote charity to stop
the fugitive, has received support from global celebrities such as Oprah
Winfrey and raised US$5 million, according to reports.
In the city of Bangassou in the Central Africa
Republic where the LRA is said to have moved from northern Uganda, Roman
Catholic Bishop Juan Jos Aguirre said the film had the merit to bring the war
to the world's attention. "I have counted every tear of these people and I
encourage them not to lose hope," Aguirre was quoted in news reports as
saying.
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