The Lord's Resistance Army (LRA) has sent a letter to South
Africa to request its government to mediate the peace talks with
the Ugandan government.
"We received a request from LRA and we have forwarded it to our
government in South Africa," South African High Commissioner T.H.
Chiliza was quoted by New Vision on Friday as saying.
"Nonetheless, the government of South Africa supports the Juba
talks and expects all parties to it to reach an agreement. My point
of view is that South Africa is not a country that will refrain
from participating in making peace," the envoy said.
The LRA rebels and the Ugandan government, the long time warring
parties, have been engaged in the peace talks in Juba, southern
Sudan which was brokered by Salva Kiir, the first vice president of
Sudan and president of southern Sudan.
The LRA asked South Africa to join the mediation efforts after
expressing doubts in current mediator Riek Machar, vice president
of southern Sudan.
In a statement, LRA leader Joseph Kony's deputy Vincent Otti
said South Africa had a successful track record in conflict
resolution in Africa.
"I, Lieutenant General Vincent Otti, deputy chairman of the high
command and second-in-command of the Lord's Resistance Armydo
hereby appeal to the government of the Republic of South Africa to
come and act as co-mediator," he said.
He said South Africa would complement the efforts of the
government of southern Sudan in the talks in Juba.
"In order for the Juba negotiations to be meaningful, successful
and binding, the (LRA)... calls upon the government of Uganda to
respond positively and declare a cessation of hostilities and
respect the agenda and code of conduct agreed upon by the
negotiating parties, the mediators and facilitators," Otti
said.
Uganda insisted that any truce would be at the end of the peace
process, arguing that the rebels had in the past taken advantage of
ceasefires to regroup, re-arm and recruit.
Talks are expected to resume on Friday after a three-day recess
asked by the rebels to mourn one of their top commanders, Raska
Lukwiya, who was recently killed by the Ugandan army.
"We hope to resume on Friday because the mourning period
requested by the LRA has ended. We hope that we shall resume to
consider proposals for a ceasefire and cessation of hostilities,"
Capt. Paddy Ankunda, the spokesman for the Ugandan team, said.
The LRA's two-decade insurgency has left tens of thousands of
people dead and more than 1.4 million people displaced in northern
Uganda, which was labeled as "one of the world's most neglected
humanitarian crisis" by UN official.
(Xinhua News Agency August 19, 2006)