The
long-awaited trial of a child soldier-turned-commander in the notorious Lord's
Resistance Army (LRA) has begun in Uganda.
Thomas Kwoyelo faces
more than 90 charges - including murder, rape and the recruitment of child
soldiers.
He becomes the first
LRA commander to be tried by a Ugandan court, marking a watershed moment for
the country's judicial system.
During a court
appearance in 2011, Mr Kwoyelo denied the charges against him.
He has spent the
last 14 years in pre-trial detention, which analysts partly attribute to the
scale and complexity of the alleged crimes.
Joseph Kony formed
the LRA in Uganda more than two decades ago, and claimed to be fighting to
install a government based on the Bible's 10 Commandments.
The group was
notorious for chopping off people's limbs and abducting children to use as
soldiers and sex slaves. Hundreds of thousands of people were forced from their
homes by the conflict.
It operated mostly
in northern Uganda at first, then shifted to the Democratic Republic of Congo
where Mr Kwoyelo was arrested in 2009, and later the Central African Republic.
Friday's trial is
taking place at the International Crimes Division of the High Court in Gulu,
seen as Uganda's answer to the International Criminal Court in The Hague.
Mr Kwoyelo has
previously appeared in court as part of pre-trial hearings, but the case has
repeatedly been postponed.
Multiple witnesses are expected to give their accounts of what happened to the court.
In 2021, senior LRA commander Dominic
Ongwen was jailed for 25 years by the ICC, who decided not to
give him a maximum life sentence because he had been abducted as a child and
groomed by rebels who had killed his parents.
Mr Kwoyelo says he
too was abducted by LRA fighters in his early teenage years while walking to
school.
Thousands of former
LRA members have been granted amnesty under a controversial Ugandan law, after
leaving and renouncing the rebel group.
But this option was
not given to Mr Kwoyelo, prompting accusations the denial was politically
motivated.
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