Skip to content

Cart

Your cart is empty

Article: Uganda sends more troops to chase Islamist fighters who killed 37 students

Uganda People’s Defense Force (UPDF), Ugandan Battle Group 22 soldiers emerge from a thicket during a live fire exercise at Camp Singo, Uganda

Uganda sends more troops to chase Islamist fighters who killed 37 students

PHOTO CAPTION: Uganda People’s Defense Force (UPDF), Ugandan Battle Group 22 soldiers emerge from a thicket during a live fire exercise at Camp Singo, Uganda, March 2, 2017. (U.S. Air National Guard photo by Staff Sgt. Penny Snoozy via U.S. Defense Visual Information Distribution Service)

 

 

By Elias Biryabarema

KAMPALA (Reuters) - Uganda's President Yoweri Museveni on Sunday ordered more troops to western Uganda where attackers from a group with links to Islamic State killed at least 37 secondary school students.

Members of the rebel Allied Democratic Forces (ADF) killed the students late on Friday at Lhubirira Secondary School in Mpondwe, near the border with the Democratic Republic of Congo.

Military and police said the attackers had also abducted six students and fled towards the Virunga National Park across the border. Their fate is unknown.

Museveni said more soldiers had joined the pursuit in the area, which includes Rwenzori Mountain, from where the ADF launched their insurgency against Museveni in the 1990s.

"We are now sending more troops into the area south of Rwenzori Mountain," he said in a statement.

"Their action, the desperate, cowardly, terrorist action, therefore, will not save them. We are bringing new forces to the Uganda side as we continue the hunting on the Congo side."

On Saturday, privately owned NTV Uganda television said the death toll stood at 41, while the state-run New Vision newspaper said it was 42. New Vision said 39 of the dead were students, and some were killed when theattackers set off a bomb as they fled.

The attack drew widespread international condemnation including from the United Nations, the African Union and East African's Intergovernmental Authority on Development. Ugandans were shocked by the attack.

"Parents across the country, please do not panic, our children are safe, and they will remain safe. They are evil people and they are trying to harm our children, but they will not manage," Janet Museveni, the First Lady and Education Minister, said late on Saturday.

Museveni said the government would also investigate if there were any lapses that enabled the attack to happen.

"Was an alarm sounded and by whom? How did the nearby security people respond? Why didn’t our people on the Congo side have intelligence on this splinter group etc?" Museveni said.

The ADF was largely defeated by the Ugandan military but remnants fled into the vast jungles of eastern Congo from where they have since maintained their insurgency - attacking civilian and military targets in Congo andUganda.

In April, the ADF attacked a village in eastern Democratic Republic of Congo, killing at least 20 people.

 

(Reporting by Elias Biryabarema; Writing by George Obulutsa; Editing by Giles Elgood)

MORE FROM THE

OAF NATION NEWSROOM

Leopard 2A4 tanks from the Royal Canadian Dragoons, C Squadron travel in the Wainwright Garrison training area

Canada to bolster Latvia NATO deployment with 15 Leopard 2 tanks

Canada will bolster its force in Latvia with the deployment of 15 Leopard 2A4M tanks as part of NATO efforts to build a combat-capable brigade in a country that borders with Russia, the defense min...

Read more
Ukraine says eight villages retaken from Russian forces in two weeks

Ukraine says eight villages retaken from Russian forces in two weeks

Ukraine said Monday it had driven Russian forces from an eighth village in a fortified part of the front line on the most direct route to the country's Azov Sea coast. Tap for more details.

Read more
#3