I received your letter this morning and I must say I am not the least bit pleased. You brag and gloat that you got the face of the world’s largest youth movement to go mad. To tear off his clothes and cry out to the Enemy in the streets for all the world to see. You list the lies you whispered…
Jason Russell is my friend. i reached out to him a few years ago, as TWLOHA was starting to take off. i was a fan of Invisible Children and it seemed we could learn a lot from them, and i could learn a lot from him. Like IC, TWLOHA was born from a story and the surprising response to that…
(CNN) -If Joseph Kony wasn’t the most wanted man in the world, he may be now.
In the past week, a documentary detailing accusations of vile acts committed by the Ugandan warlord has spread like wildfire on social media (at the time of writing it has had more than 50 million views), prompting international outrage and a groundswell of support for his capture.
In the documentary, “Kony 2012,” which was posted online by the U.S.-based group Invisible Children, the tales of atrocities are horrifying: armed supporters force abducted children to kill their own parents, brutal mutilations include the hacking off of lips and limbs, and the sexual slavery of young girls stolen from their families. The group says its aim is to raise awareness and bring Kony to justice.
While some critics question whether the film captures the full scope of the conflict, one matter is without debate: Kony now ranks as one of the International Criminal Court’s most wanted men, facing arrest on charges of crimes against humanity after a 26-year campaign of brutality in his failed bid to overthrow the Ugandan government.
Campaigning to stop warlord Joseph Konyhealer among the Acholi people. He inherited a powerful support base from Alice Lakwena, a spirit-medium.Lakwena’s followers would “daub themselves in shea butter crosses which they believed would protect them from bullets and they believed that stones would explode like grenades,” explains Matthew Green, author of “The Wizard of the Nile - The Hunt for Africa’s Most Wanted,” about Kony.
“It was a mystical rebellion,” Green says, adding that Kony “was very much an inheritor of her mantle.” Lakwena fled to Kenya after Museveni’s forces launched a brutal attack on her and her followers.
Staying in northern Uganda, Kony rallied Lakwena’s remaining supporters and recruited more with a powerful mix of mythical claims, charisma and unconscionable violence.
What is Kony like?
Green describes being one of the few journalists to ever meet Kony when the rebel leader briefly emerged from his jungle hideout in 2006.
“Although he was surrounded by phalanxes of child soldiers with Kalashnikov rifles and bayonets fixed to them, he actually looked terrified of meeting strangers,” Green said.
Despite Kony’s apparent fear and paranoia, Green says the rebel leader was charismatic and clearly a “very powerful orator” when speaking to his people.
“He had an almost musical voice as he spoke in his Acholi language and you could see that the people listening were completely captivated.”
What are Kony’s tactics?
If Kony attracted supporters through his “mystical powers” and charisma, he kept them through fear.
“Certainly the violence is what made his movement so terrifying,” Green says. “These attacks were carried out often with machetes or clubs and the violence was designed with a very clear political purpose. It was designed to illustrate to the people in northern Uganda that the government of President Museveni could not protect them.”
Kony’s forces are believed to have abducted thousands of children to join his cause — however the exact number is unconfirmed. At the height of the violence during the mid-2000s, parents tried to protect their children from harm by sending them to sleep in towns, away from Kony’s ruthless kidnappers.
Brutal punishments were inflicted on those who were accused of disloyalty by an increasingly paranoid leader, Green says. “Kony once gave an order that anyone caught riding a bicycle should have their legs cut off. Bicycles were a very common means of transport in rural areas and he was worried that informers, if they saw the rebels, would rapidly pedal away and alert the nearest army post.”
And similarly he would cut off people’s hands as a kind of warning not to raise any hands against the rebels,” Green adds.
How organized is the Lord’s Resistance Army?
Kony created the Lord’s Resistance Army with the intention to lead, based on his version of the Ten Commandments. Since then it has grown into a “disciplined fighting force,” says Green, explaining that its members occupy a rank and are rewarded for loyalty.
Kony has been able to maintain his hold over them with his mix of self-proclaimed spiritual powers and military strategy, Ned Dalby, Central Africa researcher with the International Crisis Group, said in a 2011 interview with CNN.
“He cultivates this image of himself as a medium for the power of the spirit and at other times, he presents himself as a ruthless military leader. So he’s able to maintain cohesion as a group and maintain the loyalty of his fighters,” Dalby said.
Photo: Chris Shutlz/Flickr
Thank you for reading this and doing further research about Invisible Children (IC) and KONY 2012. In response to this explosion of interest about the KONY 2012 film, there have been hundreds of thousands of comments in support of the arrest of Joseph Kony and the work of Invisible…
In response to a not-so-shiny article in Washington Post regarding Invisible Children and KONY 2012, director Jon Turteltaub wrote the following response to the author/interviewer & interviewee:
My name is Jon Turteltaub. I have directed several movies…
We are all addicted to something that takes away the pain.
(Source: steffbunny)