KAMPALA, Uganda
Ugandan forces were on Monday shoring up supply routes into neighbouring Democratic Republic of Congo where its army has set up an advance base to track down ADF rebels blamed for deadly attacks in Kampala.
Just before the entrance to Virunga Park in the
east of the DRC, rows of army tents sprang up in the village of Mukakati.
About 13 kilometres (eight miles) from the base
is the Nobili border crossing, through which columns of Ugandan soldiers, 4x4s,
tarpaulin-covered trucks, tankers, armoured vehicles and heavy machine guns
have been passing every day for almost a week, tearing up the dirt road.
On Monday morning, an AFP correspondent saw two
earthmoving machines arrive in Nobili.
The road is "really not good", Major
Peter Mugisa, an information officer, told Ugandan TV. "We need to halt a
bit for a week... (and) try to open up the road so that our heavy vehicles can
move forward."
There were also problems securing supplies of
drinking water, he said.
Early on the morning of November 30, Ugandan
aircraft and artillery pounded areas where bases of the Allied Democratic
Forces had been spotted.
The ADF, which traces its origins back to
Uganda and has been active since 1995 in the eastern DRC, where it is
considered the deadliest of the armed groups operating in the region, is
responsible for the massacre of thousands of civilians, kidnappings and
looting.
After the Ugandan jet strikes, both countries'
armies said they were following up ground searches.
The Ugandan defence ministry said the joint
operation was codenamed "Shujaa" -- the strong one, in Swahili.
While the Ugandan military is viewed with suspicion by some locals -- having been accused, along with Rwandan forces, of being a major destabilising factor in eastern DRC for decades, the failure of DRC forces to contain the armed groups has left little hope for a domestic-only solution.
Even "a devil" would be welcome if he
brought peace and security, said Samy Kabonabe, the president of a local youth
group.
"On the other hand, it is a failure of our
Congolese military."
The North Kivu and Ituri regions have been
under a state of siege for the past seven months, an exceptional measure that
gives full power to the military but which has failed to curb the
violence.
"We have suffered for a long time, we
don't go to work our fields anymore" because of the insecurity, said
Zawadi Pendeza, 34, adding that she is also happy to see the arrival of an army
that seems experienced and well-equipped.
On the track linking Nobili to Mukakati, roadblocks
were manned by soldiers from both armies, who checked travellers' papers and
luggage.
On Monday afternoon, two officers, one
Congolese and the other Ugandan, explained the operation and took questions
from people in the centre of the village of Kamango, about eight km from
Nobili.
"The message was that they had come to
find the enemy," one resident said.
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