CAR rebels seek $5m bounty for LRA commander
Bangui
- Seleka rebels in Central African Republic want the United States to pay them
a bounty of up to $5m, saying they were the ones who captured fugitive Ugandan
Lords Resistance Army commander Dominic Ongwen.
US
forces helping African nations track the LRA across Central Africa said earlier
this week that they had detained a man claiming to be Ongwen, a rebel chief
wanted by the International Criminal Court for crimes against humanity.
Uganda
says it has confirmed the man in custody is Ongwen, an ex-child soldier who
rose through the ranks of the LRA to become a senior commander.
The
US government had offered a reward of "up to $5 million" for
information leading to the arrest, transfer or conviction of Ongwen under its
Rewards for Justice programme.
The
mainly Muslim Seleka rebel group, which was forced from power in CAR last year,
says it handed Ongwen to US officials after capturing him in a battle.
"We
were the ones who brought him to our base. The Americans came with two
helicopters, one of which landed to pick up the prisoner," Mounir Ahmat,
Seleka commander in the northern town of Sam Ouandja, told Reuters.
"We
still haven't received the reward promised for the capture of Dominic Ongwen. I
called the Americans this morning and they promised to come back in two days
time," he added.
The
US government, which offers bounty for high-level fugitives, said it would not
comment on these payments for reasons of security and confidentiality. But the
State Department said on Friday it wants Ongwen to face justice for alleged
crimes.
Ugandan
officials have said Ongwen will be flown to Uganda pending a decision on what
happens next, highlighting a potential tug-of-war over what to do with him.
The
LRA rose up against the government in northern Uganda under the leadership of
Joseph Kony in the late 1980s.
Having
earned a reputation for carrying out massacres and mutilating victims, the LRA
left Uganda about a decade ago and has roamed across parts of Democratic
Republic of Congo, South Sudan and CAR since then, eluding efforts to defeat
them.
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