Lying on the border of East Africa is the Uganda Protectorate, colonized by Great Britain in 1894, it is a country in which people live on high plateaus due to the land consisting of mountainous terrain. One of its most resourceful bodies of water is Lake Victoria. Uganda’s abundance of rainfall and healthy soil allows for its rich natural resources. Despite those factors, Uganda is a land of poverty. Through slow and steady growth, Uganda reached a turning point in their social, political, and economic standing; realizing their potential, Uganda grows out of colonialism achieving independence on October 9th, 1962. - Uganda after independence and how it struggled through social political and economic factors - How child soldiers came …show more content…
They are regularly raped by the commanders, the girls who give birth to any of commanders children have practically no chance of ever escaping these armed groups because they were their sexual pleasure. In Uganda the children are usually kidnapped or abducted by force. Usually children in Uganda are used as soldiers to fight off government forces or attack certain places they feel the need to attack. After children commit massacres, they are told by leaders like Kony 's deputy, Vincent Ottthat that what they did was not all bad because it was for a bigger purpose and that they would do a ritual that will cleanse them from all crimes they had done (CITE). The LRA has brainwash these kids in committing shocking crimes acts against innocent people who defined LRA ideologies. One is faced with the conflicted between whether these children are victims or perpetrators. These kids take on multiple roles of being both victims and perpetrators. This conversation creates a problem because how do we reintegrate children back into villages in which they could have committed heinous acts towards friends, families, and people who live in these communities (Annan, Brier, & Aryemo, 2009, p.