[Congressional Record Volume 156, Number 32 (Monday, March 8, 2010)]
[Senate]
[Page S1258]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
UGANDA RECOVERY ACT
Mr. LEVIN. Mr. President, I am a cosponsor of a bill introduced by
Senators Feingold and Brownback, the Lord's Resistance Army Disarmament
and Northern Uganda Recovery Act. I am one of the 62 cosponsors of this
legislation, and I believe this broad bipartisan support speaks to both
the urgency of this issue and the importance of this legislation.
On a continent plagued by man-made tragedy, the Lord's Resistance
Army stands out as a manufacturer of that tragedy. The U.S. State
Department describes the LRA as ``vicious and cult-like.'' Formed in
the 1980s to overthrow the Ugandan government, the LRA engaged in such
widespread violence that at one time, about 2 million Ugandans were
displaced from their homes. The LRA massacred, mutilated and abducted
civilians, and forced many into sexual servitude. An estimated 66,000
Ugandan youths were forced to fight for the group.
The good news is that the Ugandan government has now largely pushed
the LRA out of Uganda. The bad news is that the scars it has left
behind are raw and real for Ugandans; and that meanwhile, the LRA has
moved into parts of Sudan, the Democratic Republic of Congo, and the
Central African Republic, continuing to spread violence and terror.
Between September of 2008 and July of 2009, the United Nations
estimates that LRA violence claimed 1,300 civilian lives, that the LRA
abducted another 1,400 civilians, and that more than 300,000 were
forced from their homes.
This legislation, which 63 Senators support, would take a number of
steps to address both the aftermath of the LRA's rampage in Northern
Uganda and its continuing violence in Uganda's neighbor nations. The
Act would require that within six months, the United States develop a
comprehensive strategy for dealing with the LRA, including an outline
of steps to protect the civilian population against LRA violence. The
act would authorize funding under the Foreign Assistance Act of 1961 to
provide humanitarian assistance in areas affected by LRA. And it would
provide assistance for reconstruction and for promotion of justice and
reconciliation in areas of Uganda recovering from the LRA's
depredations.
It is unfortunate that despite the broad and bipartisan support for
this legislation, apparently only one Member of the Senate objects to
it and is able to block its consideration. As with so many measures
before the Senate, there is little doubt that this bill would win
overwhelming passage were it allowed to come to the floor.
But the innocent victims of LRA violence, past and present, need our
help. The objection of one Senator should not be allowed to thwart us
responding to that need.
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