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Uganda Says Wanted LRA Rebel 'May be Dead'

The wanted deputy of Uganda's murderous Lord's Resistance Army (LRA) rebels, Okot Odhiambo, may have been killed in recent fighting, the Ugandan defense minister told Agence France Presse Friday.

Odhiambo was indicted by the Hague-based International Criminal Court (ICC) in 2005, along with LRA chief Joseph Kony and fellow rebel Dominic Ongwen, on charges of butchering and kidnapping civilians.

"There are pointers from defectors that Okot Odhiambo may be dead," Ugandan Defense Minister Crispus Kiyonga told AFP Friday. "Our forces are verifying these reports to check if indeed he died in the battles we have had with them and a position will be communicated."

"It will not be a surprise that he could be dead because the UPDF (Ugandan army) has in the past killed many top LRA commanders and he cannot be an exception," he added.

"The LRA's strength has diminished and the remaining force, including Kony, are on the run."

In recent years the group has been forced out of Uganda and Odhiambo had been thought to be hiding out with a hardcore of fighters in the remote jungles of Central African Republic or northeast Democratic Republic of Congo.

Ugandan army spokesman Paddy Ankunda also told AFP the intelligence reports had come from rebel defectors, who said the rebel commander may have died in a Ugandan army assault "at the end of last year".

"We are trying to verify the report, but there is a very high possibility that he is dead," Ankunda said.

According to the ICC warrant, former LRA members describe Odiambo as a "ruthless killer" and "the one who killed the most."

Odhiambo is widely suspected to have directed the killing of some 300 civilians during a February 2004 attack on the Barlonyo internally displaced persons camp in northern Uganda, one of the single largest massacres in the LRA's brutal history.

After Odhiambo reportedly ordered the rebels to "kill every living thing," eyewitnesses say camp residents were burnt alive in their homes, hacked to death with machetes, stabbed, bludgeoned and shot as they tried to escape.

A US embassy spokesman in Uganda, Daniel Travis, told the Daily Monitor newspaper that Washington -- which has a unit of US special forces helping in the for LRA leaders -- was in the process of "verifying similar reports".

Source: Agence France Presse


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