Kony Second In Command Captured – In Uganda Of Course.
I never believed Kony and his army were in the Sudan. I always just presumed they were in Uganda.
Ugandan forces captured a senior commander of Joseph Kony’s Lord’s Resistance Army after a brief fight with rebels near the Congo-Central African Republic border, an army official said Sunday, in what an analyst said was an “intelligence coup” for forces hunting for Kony.Lt. Col. Abdul Rugumayo, intelligence chief for Uganda’s military operation against the Lord’s Resistance Army, said Caesar Acellam was captured Saturday with two other rebel fighters as they tried to cross a river called Mbomu.
Although he is not one of the LRA commanders indicted along with Kony in 2005 by the International Criminal Court (ICC), Ugandan officials say he was one of Kony’s top military strategists and a reliable fighter.
“He is in good condition,” Col. Rugumayo said of the commander. “He was captured with two other rebels. They were in a group of 30 rebels.”
He said the others escaped.
Whilst The World Now Wants To Kill ‘Kony 2012′ – The Ugandan Government Still Want To ‘Kill Gays’.
Remember please that this act is back before the Ugandan Government. The same Government whose Army like to rape. They are a crap Government.
In a move that will likely surprise no one, lawmakers in Uganda have once again introduced the Anti-Homosexuality Bill of 2009.
The legislation, which President Obama once called “odious”, was dubbed the “Kill the Gays” bill for its death penalty provision for repeat offenders. However, the draft legislation is said to have been modified to drop that aspect of the bill.
From the BBC:
A BBC correspondent says MPs laughed, clapped and cried out: “Our bill, our bill,” when its architect David Bahati reintroduced the draft legislation on Tuesday.
The Anti-Homosexuality Bill was shelved in 2011 after an international outcry.
[...]
The BBC’s Joshua Mmali in the capital, Kampala, says Mr Bahati, the primary backer of the bill, has confirmed the draft legislation has changed in one fundamental way.
Those found guilty of “aggravated homosexuality” – defined as when one of the participants is a minor, HIV-positive, disabled or a “serial offender” – would no longer face the death penalty, as originally proposed.
This appears to be slightly inaccurate however. The ever vigilant Warren Throckmorton reports that the legislation tabled by MP Bahati contains no such change. Instead, word is the legislation could be changed at committee stage. Throckmorton has both the original bill and the proposed amended text. However, readers familiar with the legislation’s history will know that such assurances have been made before only for the bill to go to the voting stage in tact and without the death sentence deleted.
The legislation was originally introduced in 2009. Then, following an international outcry, action on the Bill stalled until last year when it came close to a full vote before a procedural oversight meant parliament ran out of time.






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