INTRODUCTION
The trial of Thomas Kwoyelo – the first domestic war crimes case in Uganda – provides a fascinating exemplar of international and domestic political machinations that shape the Lord's Resistance Army (LRA) accountability debate in Uganda. Thus far, the way in which Uganda's first war crimes trial has been discussed and understood by those most affected by violence has been under-explored. Analysis of Kwoyelo's trial from the ‘bottom up’ has been limited to journalistic and NGO accounts that tend to over-simplify the ‘victim’ perspective as being either ‘for’ or ‘against’ the trial without exploring why this might be the case.Footnote 1 In what follows, we develop a more detailed analysis, arguing that local perspectives are shaped in large part by how Kwoyelo and his alleged crimes are understood to impact upon immediate socio-economic and cosmological relational dynamics in the context of a fragile peace. This, in turn, is guided by whether Kwoyelo, as an individual, and his alleged crimes are intimately known and directly experienced or whether both are subsumed into broader narratives about war, peace and distrust of the government of Ugandan (GoU). Interpreting local reactions to the trial tells us a great deal not only about the case in question, but also about the relationship between many Acholi and those state institutions involved in the distribution of justice. In addition, responses are indicative of the complexity of Acholi attitudes towards LRA crimes and notions of appropriate redress – whether through punishment or more compensatory measures. These, we argue, are oriented by understandings of the wrongdoing itself and the degree to which responses to crime are expected to have an impact on ‘social harmony’. The article concludes with a discussion of the relevance of these findings to the broader project of ‘transitional justice’ across the African continent.
Since the end of the Cold War, transitional justice – a set of judicial and non-judicial measures designed to redress legacies of heinous human rights abuses – has become a normalized and anticipated international and national response to mass atrocity. It has become ‘institutionalised and mainstreamed, embraced by the UN and buttressed by an emerging industry of international non-governmental organisations (NGOs), expert consultants, dedicated staff at the UN and academic journals’ (Sharp Reference Sharp2015: 153).Footnote 2 Today, transitional justice tends to be subsumed into broader liberal peacebuilding programmes. Africa's first domestic war crimes court, the International Crimes Division (ICD) of the Ugandan High Court, which is trying Kwoyelo, is indicative of this trend and comprises a key component of Uganda's post-LRA transitional justice strategy. As an institution, it was conceived during the Juba peace talks between the LRA and the GoU, which took place between 2006 and 2008, and has been funded largely by European justice sector donors, who also provide technical expertise and staff (Nouwen Reference Nouwen2013).
According to the UN and World Bank, as well as other international aid agencies, transitional justice in conflict and post-conflict regions delivers widespread benefits, including accountability, truth, peace, reconciliation, strengthening of the rule of law and democratic consolidation (World Bank 2011; UNSG 2004). Critics, however, argue that transitional justice has become part of a ‘hegemonic discourse’, which prioritizes state-centric legal responses to mass atrocity, creating ‘empty institutions’ that fail to engage with communities that have been affected by violence (Gready and Robins Reference Gready and Robins2014: 341). Furthermore, it is argued that transitional justice policy is ‘faith-based’ rather than ‘fact-based’: it is guided by value-driven normative assumptions about the inherent value of, say, human rights promotion, rather than by robust evidence about occurrences on the ground (Thoms et al. Reference Thoms, Ron and Paris2009; Macdonald Reference Macdonald2015a). In response, there has been a ‘shift to the local’ in transitional justice research in recent years (Shaw and Waldorf Reference Shaw and Waldorf2010). This has led to important, largely ethnographic research, examining how ‘the paradigm of transitional justice … is increasingly de-stabilized by its local application’ (ibid.: 6; Anders and Zenker Reference Anders and Zenker2014; Hinton Reference Hinton2011). Despite this, the broader transitional justice field remains overshadowed by a set of binaries that have long dominated the debate. These binaries tend to essentialize and objectify justice needs in post-conflict places around false dichotomies of ‘local versus international’ and ‘restorative versus retributive’ approaches, positing the notion of non-Western local order against Western liberal order and leading to what Hinton calls ‘identity shrinkage’ (Hinton Reference Hinton2011: 7; Moe Reference Moe2013; Macdonald Reference Macdonaldforthcoming).
Uganda has been a laboratory for many of these debates, and scholarly perspectives on the role of the ICD in northern Uganda's transition from war to peace are often framed in these terms. So, for example, criminal justice advocates argue that Acholi people want accountability and that criminal trials will contribute to peacebuilding and the consolidation of the rule of law across the region (Allen Reference Allen2006). Critics, meanwhile, argue that a criminal justice approach is out of sync with local practices of reconciliation and healing.Footnote 3 We suggest that local perspectives of the ICD and its first trial are much more complex than either interpretation allows and can tell us about how people negotiate ideas of justice and accountability in post-conflict Acholiland more generally. Local perspectives are neither homogeneous nor are they based on culturally essentialist notions or international norms; rather, they are guided by the most practical and effective means by which to restore balance and meaning to post-conflict relations.
In unpacking Acholi attitudes towards Kwoyelo's trial, this article draws upon the two authors’ combined, long-term fieldwork in the region since 2009. In response to fieldwork encounters and to events as they unfolded, we drew on ethnographic and more structured data relating to the Kwoyelo case and built on this with more targeted in-depth interviews in 2012 and 2013. The evidence we reflect on here therefore includes ongoing participant observation focused on crime, wrongdoing and its aftermath in a village where Kwoyelo is alleged to have led and participated in violence; twenty-five focus group discussions (FGDs) conducted across Acholiland between 2012 and 2013 on broad issues concerning wrongdoing, justice, accountability and reconciliation; and over 100 semi-structured interviews with public authority figures and other key informants related to Kwoyelo and/or directly affected by his alleged crimes. Participant observation allowed us to set local attitudes and interactions expressed during the FGDs and interviews in their broader historical and political context. Additionally, relationships and trust built in our research sites fostered open communication among respondents and gave us insight into the evolving narratives of those involved. The triangulation of methods and data further allowed us to cross-check our ideas and interpretations.
WHO IS THOMAS KWOYELO?
Thomas Kwoyelo is a former LRA member taken into custody in Uganda after being wounded by the Ugandan People's Defence Force (UPDF) in north-eastern Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC) in March 2009.Footnote 4 His trial has been filled with drama, intrigue and politics. Debates have centred on two interlocking issues: the disputed seniority of Kwoyelo in the LRA; and the institutional, political and legal conflict between amnesty and prosecution for war crimes in Uganda.
Kwoyelo's own narrative, expressed through his legal team and in various court documents, is that he was abducted by the LRA in 1987 at the age of thirteen while on his way to Pabbo primary school. He was never afforded an opportunity to escape and, like other abductees, he gradually rose in rank until he became a commander. Following his capture he was imprisoned in Uganda.Footnote 5 For Kwoyelo, the injustice of his situation lay in the fact that other officers, more senior to him, had applied for and been granted amnesty under Uganda's 2000 Amnesty Act, including Brigadier Kenneth Banya, who was captured by the UPDF in 2004, and former LRA spokesperson Sam Kolo, who surrendered in 2005.Footnote 6 Indeed, even since Kwoyelo's arrest and trial, LRA commander Caesar Acellam (often referred to as the ‘fourth most important commander in the LRA’) has returned and been granted amnesty.Footnote 7 Kwoyelo's submission claimed that he was a victim not only of unequal treatment, but also of gross government negligence. ‘The same state,’ Kwoyelo's affidavit reads, ‘which should have protected me from abduction as a child, is the same state that is prosecuting me when I have since renounced armed rebellion.’Footnote 8
The prosecution's narrative is that Kwoyelo was, at all times relevant to the indictment, a senior commander or officer in the LRA and that he ‘occupied several senior positions … including commander of operations, director of military intelligence, and in-charge of sick bays’.Footnote 9 According to Directorate of Public Prosecution (DPP) officials, he was not only ‘high-level’, he was also a willing recruit who joined the LRA of his own accord in his twenties and repeatedly frustrated attempts by the Ugandan government to negotiate his surrender.Footnote 10 In addition, sources claim that the prospect of amnesty did not immediately appeal to him and he applied only in early 2010 under considerable pressure from family and his legal team.Footnote 11
None of this, however, explains why, to date, Thomas Kwoyelo is the only LRA member to have been pursued for prosecution by the ICD. When the ‘Why Kwoyelo?’ question was put to senior DPP officials, the answer was straightforward. They linked his arrest and prosecution to the political climate at the time of his capture: peace talks between the LRA/M (Movement) and the GoU in Juba had recently failed but an interim transitional justice agreement – the ‘Agreement on Accountability and Reconciliation’ (AAR) – and an implementing protocol (the AAR accords) had been signed by both delegations in June 2007 and February 2008 respectively. The accords laid out national procedures for dealing with LRA and UPDF crimes committed during the conflict, including setting up a special division of the High Court of Uganda to hear domestic war crimes trials.Footnote 12 Despite the lack of signatures on the final peace agreement, the GoU remained ostensibly committed to implementing the AAR accords. As a DPP official explained: ‘At that time … peace talks had just collapsed but the AAR was in existence; his arrest was timely and that is why we picked on him.’Footnote 13 Furthermore, international donors were greatly enthused by the idea of a Ugandan war crimes court and Kwoyelo's fate therefore became tied up with broader concerns relating to donor financing of this new legal edifice (Nouwen Reference Nouwen2013: 182). A lawyer close to the process explained that ‘so much has been sunk into the court. They had to have that first trial.’Footnote 14 Nevertheless, the prosecution's decision to bring a case against a former LRA member who had evidently applied for amnesty while the Amnesty Act was still in operation remained surprising, raising serious questions about prosecutorial strategy and expected outcomes.
THE PATH TO PROSECUTION
The trial was preceded by two decades of armed conflict, and heated domestic and international debate about how crimes committed during this time should be addressed. In 1986, President Museveni and the National Resistance Army/Movement (NRA/M) came to power in Uganda after a five-year guerrilla war. Almost immediately, the new NRM government, made up primarily of Bantu-speaking southerners, launched a military campaign to stamp out opposition in the north, the home region of previous rulers in postcolonial Uganda. This had the opposite effect, sparking a number of armed rebellions. The most enduring and devastating of these was led by the LRA. The GoU's counter-insurgency policy, from the mid-1990s onwards, was to create free firing zones by moving civilians into squalid internally displaced persons’ (IDP) camps where the UPDF could ‘protect’ them (WHO 2005). At the peak of this displacement, it was estimated that some 90 per cent of the Acholi population in the sub-region were being kept in wretched conditions in ‘rural prisons’, subject to both UPDF and LRA violence.Footnote 15 In December 2003, President Museveni referred the ‘situation concerning the LRA’ to the newly established International Criminal Court (ICC) (Nouwen Reference Nouwen2013: 390).
The ICC issued its first arrest warrants in July 2005, targeting five LRA commanders and placing northern Uganda at the heart of transitional justice debates. One year later, in July 2006, peace talks began in Juba and relative calm came to northern Uganda. In December 2008, talks collapsed when LRA leader Joseph Kony failed to sign the final peace agreement and a joint military operation commenced (mostly in DRC) against the LRA: Operation Lightning Thunder.Footnote 16 By then, the LRA had moved outside Uganda and borders were effectively sealed to prevent their return. Since then, ‘guns have fallen silent’ in northern Uganda and by 2010 the vast majority of Acholi who had lived in IDP camps had returned to their areas of origin or had resettled elsewhere (UNHCR 2015).
The ICD of the Ugandan High Court officially came into being in May 2011.Footnote 17 Thus far, two major obstacles have impeded its progress. The first is that Uganda's 2000 Amnesty Act, covering Ugandans ‘formerly or currently engaged in rebellion against the NRM government’, remains in effect, after a brief lapse between May 2012 and May 2013.Footnote 18 An amendment to the Act in 2006 allowed the Minister of Internal Affairs to bar individuals from receiving amnesty with parliamentary approval, but no such steps have been taken.Footnote 19 The second obstacle is that any prosecution of government-linked war crimes under the current government is highly unlikely. The official reason is that an accountability system – the court martial system – is already in place for UPDF crimes. The unofficial explanation, given by senior staff in the Justice Law and Order Sector (JLOS), is that ‘the DPP would never investigate [UPDF crimes] because the ICD is a victor's court … keeping the UPDF out protects the NRM’ (Macdonald Reference Macdonald2015b: 183).
After Kwoyelo's capture in 2009, he was placed in the custody of military intelligence for approximately three months before being handed over for prosecution. On 4 June 2009, he was charged before Gulu Chief Magistrates’ Court with offences under the Penal Code Act, including kidnapping with intent to murder.Footnote 20 The case was adjourned for further investigation and Kwoyelo was remanded to prison in Gulu, and later transferred to Luzira maximum security prison near Kampala.Footnote 21
Kwoyelo applied for amnesty in January 2010 while in custody at Luzira.Footnote 22 On 19 March 2010, the Amnesty Commission wrote to the DPP that ‘the Amnesty Commission considers him as one who is qualified to benefit from the Amnesty process’.Footnote 23 It requested the DPP's certification, under sections 3 and 4 of the Act, that Kwoyelo was not being detained for any crimes unrelated to rebellion.Footnote 24 The DPP never responded, so amnesty was not granted. Instead, in August 2010, two months after the ICC Review Conference had taken place in Kampala, Kwoyelo was charged with twelve counts of violating Uganda's 1964 Geneva Conventions Act, including wilful killing, taking hostages, and extensive destruction of property. When Kwoyelo's trial eventually opened on 11 July 2011 at Gulu High Court (the ICD used these premises for the trial), the prosecution submitted an amended indictment, adding fifty-three ‘alternative’ charges under Uganda's penal code, including murder, kidnapping and robbery.Footnote 25
Kwoyelo pleaded not guilty to all charges, and his defence team raised objections to the constitutionality of the case. On 16 August, the Constitutional Court heard submissions regarding the objections, which were twofold. The first was that, in being refused amnesty, Kwoyelo was being denied equal treatment under Uganda's Amnesty Act.Footnote 26 The second was that Kwoyelo's initial detention period under the UPDF was unconstitutional. In a surprise move, the Attorney General's representative argued that the Amnesty Act itself was unconstitutional, and should not therefore prevent Kwoyelo's case from proceeding. On 22 September, the Constitutional Court delivered its ruling: it found that the Act was constitutional, and that this should bar Kwoyelo's case from proceeding because he was being treated unequally under it.Footnote 27
Following this ruling, Kwoyelo's lawyers presented a petition to the High Court requesting his release from prison. In January 2012, the High Court ruled in Kwoyelo's favour, but he has remained in Luzira ever since.Footnote 28 Meanwhile, the DPP immediately appealed to the Supreme Court against the Constitutional Court decision. Over three and a half years later, in April 2015, the Supreme Court judges ruled that there is nothing unconstitutional about the Amnesty Act but that it does not grant blanket amnesty in all criminal cases, and thus the decision not to grant Kwoyelo amnesty was not proof that he has been treated unequally and the trial could proceed. It is currently planned to recommence in October 2016 but may well be postponed.Footnote 29
INTERPRETING LOCAL REACTIONS TO THE KWOYELO TRIAL
The Kwoyelo trial has been a topic of intense media and public interest. Journalists record ‘divided’ views among generic ‘LRA victims’, who are reported as seeing Kwoyelo either as a violent perpetrator who must face justice in a court of law, or as a victim himself who should be forgiven and reintegrated into his community through ‘traditional’ methods.Footnote 30 Members of NGO staff working in northern Uganda, meanwhile, are quoted as criticizing the trial because of its selective nature.Footnote 31 Some go further, arguing that legal prosecutions are culturally and politically inappropriate in this context.Footnote 32 In each of our research sites these views came up. But there were also observable patterns in the way people talked about the trial that are not captured in these accounts.
Below, we explore reactions of different people who might ordinarily be lumped into the category of ‘victim’. These include local politicians, Kwoyelo's relatives, childhood acquaintances, and forced wives within the LRA, as well as those who were directly impacted by the violence he is alleged to have committed and those who were not. Interpreting these reactions tells us a great deal not only about the case in question, but also about: (1) something central to Acholi perceptions and practices concerning wrongdoing and justice in general; (2) the complexity of people's attitudes towards LRA crimes; and (3) the relationship between many Acholi people and the various state, non-state and hybrid institutions involved in justice endeavours. Across research sites, attitudes towards the trial shifted depending on whether respondents ‘individuated’ or ‘de-individuated’ Kwoyelo.Footnote 33 By ‘individuate’, we mean that people single out Kwoyelo and give an individual or distinctive character to him as somebody they knew and/or to his particular crimes as memorable acts that they or somebody within their immediate community had suffered. The LRA's military strategy relied on a system of sector commanders; this means that often a particular commander, such as Kwoyelo, is closely associated with crimes carried out in a specific location. By ‘de-individuate’, we refer to the responses of people who did not know Kwoyelo personally and did not suffer from his crimes directly. Those who ‘de-individuated’ him and his crimes subsumed him and his trial into broader narratives about amnesty, forgiveness and NRM political manipulation that have shaped the transitional justice debate in Acholiland. A very powerful narrative, espoused by local political, religious and cultural leaders, as well as by supportive NGOs, emphasizes that the vast majority of LRA fighters, even those in senior ranks, were abducted against their will, and so, for the duration of their time in the LRA, their personal autonomy was entirely suspended. They therefore cannot be held culpable for their actions. In this historically contingent narrative, victims could easily have been perpetrators and the perpetrators themselves were victims.Footnote 34 Thus characters such as Kwoyelo no longer have an individual identity; rather, they take on a broader social and collective identity – that of the innocent child, abducted against his or her will, deprived of personal agency, forced to commit terrible crimes, and whose fate is now subject to the vicissitudes of a hostile central state.
It is worth elaborating here on concepts ‘self’ and ‘identity’ in African studies. Piot's concept of the ‘relational self’ (Reference Piot1999) and Shaw's concept of ‘relational individualism’ (Reference Shaw, Karp and Masolo2000) are pertinent to our findings. Both locate identity in pre-existing relational fields, where the construction of the self is ‘fundamentally connected – not only to other people (both living relatives and dead ancestors), but also to place, spiritual forces and a sense of built in order’ (Adams and Dzokoto Reference Adams and Dzokoto2010: 346). These relational fields tend to comprise relatively ‘close personal spaces’ (ibid.; Jackson Reference Jackson1989; Piot Reference Piot1999; Shaw Reference Shaw, Karp and Masolo2000). Research on ‘enemy discourse’ in African settings, for example, finds that ‘almost all misfortune is caused by people with whom you have some relation’: friends, neighbours, relatives and other people within the community (Adams and Dzokoto Reference Adams and Dzokoto2010: 348; Assimeng Reference Assimeng1989; Fisiy and Geschiere Reference Fisiy, Geschiere, Werbner and Ranger1996). Kwoyelo is directly connected to relational orders in villages where people knew him and/or directly experienced his alleged crimes. In those places, the material and social interdependence of everyday lives provides common ground within which he is ‘individuated’, and interpretations of him as a person and the risks and dangers he poses make sense. Further away from ‘close personal spaces’ where he was known and militarily active, constructions of his identity tend to be different. Because he was not connected to others in a network of personal relationships, he is more likely to be ‘de-individuated’. Interpretations of his situation as the first LRA fighter to face state justice are understood through a collective identity that people ascribe to him, based on broader shared narratives about victimhood and the LRA conflict, and immanent concerns about NRM victor's justice and its potentially dangerous material and social implications for peacebuilding in Acholiland.
While we do not claim that attitudes were entirely consistent across research sites, we noticed discernible trends in the ways in which people talked about Kwoyelo and his trial. Which of the above approaches people adopted was usually shaped by their own wartime experiences and if or how Kwoyelo's prosecution related to their current circumstances. This in turn, as will be elaborated below, was linked to the centrality of two integral aspects of lived Acholi realities: the profound value of social harmony, and distrust of higher authorities to dispense justice – whether through punishment or compensation. The following analysis allows for fuller understanding of the ICD and its first case as more than just a court and a legal process but rather as an arena in which ‘subjectivities are shaped’ (Wilke Reference Wilke and Arthur2010: 120). The Kwoyelo trial re-enacted ‘periods of violence and state repression’, while respondents’ different experiences of that recent history produced varying interpretations of the ‘justness’ of the process (ibid.).
KWOYELO'S TRIAL: OPPORTUNITY OR SPECTRE?
People who suffered directly at Kwoyelo's hands, or knew others who had done so, described a profoundly dangerous man who willingly joined the LRA in his adult life and went on to perpetrate heinous crimes. Kwoyelo's trial thus connoted an opportunity, albeit vague, to achieve some form of redress for wrongdoing that was experienced. The attack on Pagak camp in Amuru in May 2005 was a particularly distressing example of his alleged crimes. Former camp leaders said that he personally ordered the slaughter of more than twenty women, many with babies on their backs. His victims were taken outside the camp and beaten with logs. Most died. Camp leaders later found one woman who had survived:
She had been terribly beaten. She was making these signs, directing us to the place where the women had been slaughtered. At that time, she did not even know that the child she was carrying on her back had been beaten to death.Footnote 35
Kwoyelo allegedly commanded the massacre in order to punish female camp residents who had recently greeted defected LRA fighters with ululations (a common Acholi celebratory exclamation).
During his trial, the media noted the presence of Kwoyelo's elderly, barefoot mother in the courtroom, and that Kwoyelo himself is a diminutive figure, short and slight. This lent credence to the notion of Kwoyelo as a child-like victim, and sympathetic quotes from his relatives were reported in the newspapers and on national television.Footnote 36 On one day in court, attended by one of the authors, a young man wore a black T-shirt with the words ‘right beside you brother’ inscribed across his chest.
In the area where Kwoyelo grew up, however, roughly 40 kilometres north of Gulu town, men and women frowned deeply when his name was mentioned. One community leader explained that:
even if he is set free, his relatives might accept him but his neighbours who suffered? No, he will not be OK. In Acholi when you kill my relative, then I really think you should be killed.Footnote 37
Many women in particular wanted people to know what Kwoyelo had done to them and their families. ‘He was a prominent commander,’ said one. ‘He abducted our children; killed our children … we have fears that if he returns he will continue to wreak havoc and commit crimes.’Footnote 38 A group of men agreed:
Thomas Kwoyelo makes us really unhappy. We feel so aggrieved by what he did … he is our son but he committed a lot of atrocities here in this place … You have come here and one of the things you notice is that the place is quiet. It is quiet because Kwoyelo wiped away the boys of this area, the able-bodied youth, who could be doing a lot of activities now.Footnote 39
In the words of one woman: ‘What Kwoyelo did to me and my family was really unspeakable.’Footnote 40
Those respondents who particularized Kwoyelo's crimes generally welcomed his trial and the prospect of his eventual punishment. The legal intricacies of the case and objections on the basis of unfair treatment under the Amnesty Act cut little ice. Most who claimed to be his victims wanted him excommunicated from their social and moral communities by whatever means possible. In Pabbo, Amuru District, a local politician spoke of three categories of people who are ‘beyond reconciliation’: those who suffered direct violence; those whose children were abducted by him; and those with personal knowledge of his atrocities. As one man said: ‘If it were the people who were to have arrested him then I think they would have killed him, but good enough it is the government who did so.’Footnote 41
In Kwoyelo's home area, elders appeared willing to transfer their disciplinary roles to the GoU, allowing the government to act as Kwoyelo's overseer. They perceived him as a deeply destabilizing force, perpetrating crimes too numerous and profound for the local community alone to deal with. Some hoped that he would face life in prison after trial; some called for the death penalty. Others expressed a hope that a period of incarceration would allow him to see the error of his ways and ‘learn his lesson’.Footnote 42 Some argued that his prosecution ‘sets a very good example to those who have been given amnesty and later went back to [LRA] captivity to commit more atrocities’.Footnote 43
The relationship between trials, incarceration, punishment, compensation and reconciliation is unsettled. When people talked about the Kwoyelo trial they displayed a frustrated sense of turmoil about how each of these can and should fit together. This was indicative of the range of options and constraints people faced in their search for redress. As this elder's comment illustrates:
In Acholi, there is a law that says if you kill someone, you should be killed. Then I could forget. Because I would not want to see him walking and my relatives are nowhere to be seen. So, he should be put in life prison. Yeah, maybe that would sound better. And government should also find a way of compensating for all the things people lost. In that way a person like Kwoyelo could be forgiven. And then he could come forward for Mato Oput.Footnote 44 But it is very impossible for him to do that with each victim. That is why I say that the government must provide. If they did, it would then be unfair to put him in prison according to tradition.Footnote 45
‘Compensation,’ as one NGO worker familiar with the Kwoyelo case put it, ‘is the common language that victims speak’; it is often described as something tangible that the government could do to help them ‘forget’ the dreadful experiences they suffered. Yet communities affected by violence understandably qualify their desire for compensation with an acknowledgement of the deeply unequal political system they inhabit. There are numerous examples of failed expectations, broken promises and divisive politicization arising from ad hoc reparation schemes proposed and implemented in the Acholi region.Footnote 46 In discussions about the role reparations might play in delivering some degree of justice, people's spoken and physical reactions revealed the tensions such questions pose. Their reactions expressed a sense of what Campbell (Reference Campbell2004: 335) calls the ‘trauma of justice’: ‘the trauma of justice is that it is a juridical impossibility … justice requires a fundamental change to the social order which made possible the originary trauma of crimes against humanity. In this sense, justice remains an event to come.’ While reparations are an absolute priority for most war-affected Acholi, they are regarded as ‘an event to come’, something that is probably not possible under current political circumstances. Their absence, however, represents a severe and paralyzing obstacle to the reconstruction of meaningful and productive social and economic relationships.
Thus, there was the idea that some people were ‘beyond reconciliation’, as stated by the local politician in Pabbo, and that traditional and informal processes did not have the capacity to deal with a case such as Kwoyelo's. A prominent religious leader explained that certain crimes are so far beyond the normal realm that they are not in Acholi tradition, and therefore traditional methods of compensation and reconciliation cannot be used to address them. Crimes such as those of which Kwoyelo is accused are ‘in the realm of demons’, and are so dark and so counter to ideal Acholi social values that their existence is attributed to para-human causes. As such, social reintegration of the perpetrator would be perilous.Footnote 47 For many Acholi, particularly those who knew his alleged crimes in detail, Kwoyelo had placed himself outside the moral jurisdiction of Acholi responses to wrongdoing and hence of local ways of handling him, particularly without any serious prospect of equitable government financial intervention to cover compensation payments for his victims (Porter Reference Porter2013: 132–4). But was the ICD and its first war crimes trial a legitimate alternative?
The evidence suggests something more complicated. Despite a generally supportive attitude towards the trial and towards punishing Kwoyelo, people – even alleged victims, including a former forced wife who recounted tales of dreadful abuse at Kwoyelo's hands and who therefore might be expected to have a stake in the outcome – rarely expressed knowledge of, or engagement with, actual court proceedings. Logistical issues played a role: the expense involved in travelling to the High Court in Gulu and the lack of court outreach meant that people generally knew little about the progress of the trial. A more pained response related to the prospective trauma of failed expectations. One man explained how seeing Kwoyelo released would make him ‘feel too bad’.Footnote 48 Another knew that, even though he felt Kwoyelo should ‘go through a court of law’, he was not under any illusion that the trial itself could help him come to terms with what he had experienced.Footnote 49 A sub-county chief from the area where Kwoyelo was operational explained:
in general terms, we support that trial but the community has developed a resilience and the court issue is a technical issue which the layman may not comprehend so people get on with their business.Footnote 50
Outside the place ‘from where he grew’, and away from areas in Acholiland directly affected by operations he allegedly commanded, Kwoyelo was more likely to be painted as a victim of government manipulation and victor's justice. His plight and trial tended to be abstracted and slotted into broader narratives of structural violence and inequality between the GoU and Acholi. As legal proceedings played out over mid- to late 2011, conspiracy theories, rumours and misinformation were rife as people speculated and repeated as fact their understanding of why events were unfolding as they were. Here, the trial did not represent an opportunity for deserved punishment; instead it came to symbolize people's anxieties about the refractory nature of ‘distanced’ justice. Gready uses the terms ‘embedded’ and ‘distanced’ to discuss divergent approaches to justice (Gready Reference Gready2005). The distinction is both spatial and moral – it applies not only to the physical proximity of the justice mechanism to the location of the victim, but also to the extent to which the justice process carries a degree of legitimacy and credibility among affected individuals and communities. The inference is that even a physically ‘distanced’ institution can become ‘embedded’ if those closest to injustice see it as legitimate (Porter Reference Porter2012). However, for many Acholi, continued distrust of central government meant that the ICD remained a ‘distant’ institution. The focus of many people's concerns with Kwoyelo's trial was the seemingly arbitrary decision not to grant him amnesty. A lack of familiarity with Kwoyelo's exact crimes led to cost–benefit calculations about the trial that were very different from those of people who could link their suffering directly to his alleged orders or actions. On the one hand, it was feared that the trial would deter those who remain in the bush from returning; on the other, there was concern that senior commanders who had already been granted amnesty would become nervous and even belligerent. Either way, the trial appeared to disturb the ground upon which peace was believed to rest. As one man said: ‘If we don't handle this sensitively, we might blow up another rebellion.’ According to him, and many others, badly implemented ‘justice’ risked adding to grievances rather than addressing them.Footnote 51
Interestingly, opposition to the trial was often expressed with reference to the ICC. Despite not having formal institutional links, the ICD resulted from negotiations at the Juba peace talks, as a way of addressing the ICC impasse. The key criticism of both courts was that they were a political tool of the GoU, and would not apply the law equally to both sides of the conflict. In a public meeting in Gulu to mark the ten-year anniversary of the ICC, one young man stood up and said:
We are victims of a war. Museveni triggered this and we are still watching the games that are being played. So how far is the ICC and its arm in Uganda for us?Footnote 52
His solution, greeted with cheers from the crowd, was that the ICD should be closed until Museveni is placed in the dock, ‘and then the court can start its work!’Footnote 53 According to a local politician, unresolved political tensions between the NRM and ‘the Acholi’ made widespread support for the ICD impossible. He explained that ‘there are those here who hate this government and they oppose the court because it is under Museveni’.Footnote 54 This challenges the often asserted trope that Acholi people are opposed to ‘formal’ or ‘retributive’ justice for cultural reasonsFootnote 55 and highlights the key role political and economic realities play in people's calculations about post-war accountability. State-led transitional justice processes, as promoted by donors and JLOS, are often regarded as a red herring because people have a clear, lived understanding of NRM hegemony and its narrative about the war, and because there is virtually no current prospect of the government delivering a fair and comprehensive policy offering financial compensation for people's wartime losses.
Most of the time, perspectives on Kwoyelo's trial were based on people's wartime experiences, but local politicians and leaders often made more calculated decisions about how to present Kwoyelo and his trial. Norbert Mao, former opposition MP, Gulu District Chairman and presidential candidate, was one of Kwoyelo's greatest champions and promoter of the narrative that painted him as an innocent man, abducted and forced into terrible crimes against his will. ‘Above all,’ Mao told a journalist in July 2011, ‘Kwoyelo was a child that should have been protected by the government.’Footnote 56 Many religious and cultural leaders also vocally opposed the trial and referred to him as a ‘child’ who should be reintegrated back into his community through Christian forgiveness and cultural processes under their auspices (Macdonald Reference Macdonald2015b: 238). Conversely, a local politician from Kwoyelo's area, also a member of the NRM, supported the trial, arguing that both Mao and religious leaders ‘misfire’. ‘Mao should have come and crosschecked with the people here,’ he said, adding that religious leaders promote ‘only one verse of the Acholi reconciliatory set-up because traditionally we have very severe punishments in Acholi’.Footnote 57
Such politicians and government officials who support the trial typically ‘individuate’ Kwoyelo, recounting his crimes and going into detail about his character and refusal to surrender. His wrongs are defined by the belief that they emanate from his true and immutable essence of character rather than by ‘law’. Common sympathetic statements about ICC-accused Dominic Ongwen following his surrender and eventual transfer to The Hague in early 2015 illustrate the other side of the coin. Despite the gravity of crimes listed on his arrest warrant, including crimes against humanity and war crimes, as a person he is thought to be relatively decent, and the fact that he was abducted by the LRA as a young child is not disputed. For many, Ongwen's alleged actions are perceived as distinct from his moral core and believed to be the result of terrible circumstances.Footnote 58 In contrast, Kwoyelo was often characterized as a ‘wrong’ person. Those who knew him when he was young recounted rough and bullish behaviour in his pre-LRA youth. In this understanding, his actions were not due to the ‘bad surroundings’ of war (Finnström Reference Finnström2008) but because essentially at his core he is rotten. The same NRM politician quoted above extended this logic to the attitude of the GoU:
The government also takes into consideration that person in the bush. You see, if someone is active, government decides that person can still be dangerous when at large. These are state things. That is how you can weigh how likely they are to reform. Like Banya was just an Mzee, moving around the bush, he was never implicated in orders. But the Kwoyelos, with the community here, it is all muddy. His footmarks are tainted, it is bloody. That is what government does, to find out these things. I don't think if you were sitting in state house you would say, oh, let's set that one [Kwoyelo] free.Footnote 59
Dismissing the idea of the DPP as a nominally autonomous institution,Footnote 60 he argued that ‘the government’ had to make decisions about who to prosecute on the basis of prospective deterrence and expected recidivism. An Amnesty Commission official agreed, comparing Kwoyelo to a child who plays too roughly and government to a parent who witnesses the child regularly beating up his peers, undeterred despite multiple warnings. Knowing he is a bully, when another child cries, the parents require no specific evidence of guilt. They know which child to ‘grab, beat and lock in their room’.Footnote 61
Kwoyelo himself seemed aware of such opinions when, in late December 2013, after over four years in pre-trial detention, he gave his first public interview to a journalist from the government-sponsored New Vision newspaper. He said that he had benefited from a ‘peace making and reconciliation programme’ in prison and now ‘realised my past mistakes’, committing to ‘work with the Government at all cost’ and pledging that ‘once considered for clemency, I swear I will never go back to rebel activities’.Footnote 62 Whether Kwoyelo's lawyers advised him to make this statement or he simply ‘gave a passing journalist some good copy’ (Bradfield Reference Bradfield2014), he was probably aware that senior LRA commander Caesar Acellam, reportedly captured on 12 May 2012, was not handed over to the police, but instead has undergone what the UPDF 4th Division Intelligence Officer Major Patrick Bugiriwa described as ‘rehabilitation’:
if the higher command feel that he has been rehabilitated enough to join the UPDF ranks then why not? We believe people can change as we have a process of continuous sensitization and brainwashing so as he becomes a better person … the UPDF system that we have been using of brainwashing rebels will never lead to any betrayal.Footnote 63
Thus, at the political level, the alternative fate of senior LRA commanders who were captured or surrendered after Kwoyelo is not just a legal anomaly, it is indicative of a political and military approach that eschews defined rules of engagement when it comes to conflict-related crimes, and evades formulation of policy that encourages such rules. The government uses legislative processes and legal institutions strategically in order to control political, social and military threats.Footnote 64
SOCIAL HARMONY
The varied local responses to Kwoyelo's trial are further explained by the highly valued ideal of ‘social harmony’ in Acholi society. Research indicates that notions of appropriate punishment are guided by understandings of the act of wrongdoing itself and by the degree to which the perpetrator is considered to be important to future social harmony (Porter Reference Porter2013: 39). Social harmony refers to a state of normal relations among the living and the dead, linked to an idea of cosmological equilibrium and a social balance of power and moral order (ibid.: 15). As with any social or cultural ideal, such a balanced equilibrium is something to be striven for, even if never fully achievable. Social harmony is an ethnographic descriptor rooted in observations of Acholi daily life and crises. It refers to a repertoire of norms, important among which is the deeply social and cosmological idea of ‘good existence’. It encompasses the Acholi concept of piny maber, or ‘good surroundings’ – which Okot p'Bitek (Reference p'Bitek1986: 27) describes as ‘when things are normal, the society thriving, facing and overcoming crises’, and which Finnström (Reference Finnström2008) contrasts with piny marac, the ‘bad surroundings’ of the northern Uganda war. It concerns what is considered kit mapore – the ‘right or fitting way/behaviour’ to coexist with one another, a sense of an appropriate way of life, of Acholi propriety – and the importance of bed ki woro, or ‘be[ing] with respect’, for both the living and the dead (Porter Reference Porter2016). These notions are enmeshed in what people refer to as cik Acholi, which can be roughly (if inadequately) translated as Acholi ‘law’ and is often evoked on both sides of contested issues and arguments to assert moral probity (ibid.).
Cik Acholi is best conceptualized not as ‘established precepts’ but as a loosely constructed repertoire of contested norms (Comaroff and Roberts Reference Comaroff and Roberts1981: 4). Such notions are constantly negotiated and evolving. They do not represent a singular, uncontested Acholi cosmology. Contestation and negotiation over normative schemes have long been central concerns in Africanist anthropology (Colson Reference Colson1953; Comaroff and Roberts Reference Comaroff and Roberts1981; Gluckman Reference Gluckman1955; Reference Gluckman and Turner1971; Hutchinson Reference Hutchinson1996; Turner Reference Turner1957): they have been seen as normal and, at least within certain bounds, compatible with ‘stability’ (Gluckman Reference Gluckman1955). In systems where continued allegiance to kin is emphasized, for example, spouses are often in conflict: ‘The result is that conflicts in one set of relationships, over a wider range of society or through a longer period of time, lead to the reestablishment of social cohesion’ (Gluckman Reference Gluckman1955: 2). Recognizing that contestation is central to social life, Gluckman nonetheless describes the highly inequitable divisions and oppositions within South Africa with terms such as ‘social cohesion’ and ‘ideological consensus’ rooted in a deep interdependence of interests between subordinate and hegemonic social dynamics (Reference Gluckman and Turner1971: 127, 134). Thus the term ‘harmony’ does not elide contestation, but draws attention to the constant negotiation of norms and the ways in which they are regularly transgressed. Acholi, like many other people, have an idea that relations have an optimal temperature range; they become problematic or even dangerous when they reach the upper limit or boiling point, necessitating ‘cooling’ (Abrahams Reference Abrahams and La Fontaine1972).
So what restores or maintains social harmony in the Acholi context? One important way of putting social relationships right after wrongdoing among Acholi involves payments linked to notions of accountability. Money (or other wealth) can be an important means to resolve indebtedness that results from social interactions.Footnote 65 Therefore, compensation is a typical mode of dealing with transgressions, but has meaning beyond its material component. The significance of compensation can be understood through the inextricability of social relationships and material exchanges. As would be true for many senior LRA members, Kwoyelo lacks the material and social resources to compensate or reconcile with each of his alleged victims. In many cases, doing so would not be feasible because of the particular nature of the crimes committed, which may be too grave, widespread and awful to make reconciliation or full compensation possible. Reactions of those closer to Kwoyelo and his alleged crimes indicate that his presence would jeopardize and threaten social harmony. The perceptions of his essentially ‘rotten’ character, and the nature and extent of his alleged wrongdoing, surpass the material or social resources required for compensation or reconciliation, and indeed seem to be beyond the bounds of Acholi moral jurisdiction. The trial is therefore seen as contributing to social harmony by potentially removing the destabilizing prospect of Kwoyelo returning home. On the other hand, the reactions of the wider Acholi community – those less affected by Kwoyelo's crimes – suggest that the punishment of Kwoyelo is potentially disruptive to social harmony. These are indicative of a broader concern about the pernicious role of ‘distanced’, politicized justice institutions that lack both moral authority and moral jurisdiction at the local level.
Deep distrust of distanced justice actors likewise affects those who want to see Kwoyelo punished. This can lead to conflicted, even contradictory, feelings about his prosecution. At one site where Kwoyelo allegedly commanded a horrific massacre, most people said that they would gladly see him punished. When the Constitutional Court ruled that he be granted amnesty and released, many were unhappy about the prospect of him going free. At the same time, however, many also shared concerns mentioned above about the independence of the ICD, the arbitrary way in which he was denied amnesty to begin with, and the lack of attention to state crimes, and were angry about other senior members of the LRA who were ‘walking free’. Which crimes were chosen to prosecute and which were excluded – for example, sexual crimes – was equally unclear, and the decision was generally regarded to be arbitrary and unfair.Footnote 66
In different ways, the evidence considered above reveals that while people's opinions differed on these matters, often as a result of their direct relationship to the alleged perpetrator and their particular wartime experiences, the ICD remained relatively ‘distant’ as an institution of justice for most. For those who suffered directly as a result of Kwoyelo's alleged crimes, his character was so reprehensible and his crimes so odious to the moral community that most wanted him excluded by whatever means, perhaps even preferably by an outside institution. For those who had no direct relationship to him or his wrongdoing, the seemingly arbitrary actions of the ICD were sometimes seen as further evidence of the validity of their own position of distrust towards central government authorities, interpreted through the lens of historical experiences of structural violence and inequality. Meanwhile, local political leaders employed schematic representations of Kwoyelo to ‘compete for attention and identification’ among their constituents in ways essentially detached from the technical aspects of the legal process (Wilke Reference Wilke and Arthur2010: 146).
FINAL REFLECTIONS: IMPLICATIONS FOR THE TRANSITIONAL JUSTICE PROJECT
This article paints a complex picture of ‘the local’ in transitional justice, too often described in simplistic and homogeneous terms. In his study of northern Uganda, Branch critiques what he calls the ‘ethnojustice’ approach to accountability: the notion that ‘Africans’, regardless of context, possess an ‘unspoken, unanimous worldview’ on these issues (Branch Reference Branch2014: 614). Our findings add further empirical weight to this critique: post-conflict perspectives on justice and redress are marked by heterogeneity rather than by consensus. The different representations of Kwoyelo and varying conceptions of the ‘justness’ of his trial are rooted in intricate conceptions of crime, accountability (often associated with payments of compensation and social acceptance of responsibility) and appropriate ways to redress wrongdoing, which, in turn, are linked to notions of moral community and the importance of achieving social harmony. In some instances, the ICD and the Kwoyelo trial made sense from the perspective of these logics; in others, neither was seen as a constructive way of restoring peace and stability to a society attempting to recover from a relentlessly long and destructive conflict.
The tendency to consider the individual identity of the perpetrator after wrongdoing, and the extent to which punishment may affect broader relational fields and ‘the rest of life’, is not unique to Acholiland (Dresch Reference Dresch, Dresh and Skoda2012: 12). As has been pointed out in other rural African contexts, the ‘legal subject’ tends to be constructed ‘as a person inextricably linked to family, clan and culture’ (Stevens Reference Stevens2001: 23). In the close-knit rural communities where the vast majority of Acholi people live, relationships are based on continuous social and economic dependence. As van Velsen once noted, where such relationships exist, even when formal legal processes do intervene, ‘judges and litigants, and the litigants among themselves, interact in relationships whose significance ranges beyond the transitoriness of the court or a particular dispute’ (van Velsen Reference van Velsen and Gluckman1969: 138; Stevens Reference Stevens2001: 22). Often, when people are asked about their perspectives on post-conflict justice, they are not thinking about ‘universal truths’ but rather about this web of interdependent relationships. Thus stylized conceptual distinctions between preferences for ‘retributive’ versus ‘restorative’ approaches to accountability, common in the broader transitional justice narrative, are abstractions that essentialize people's attitudes as inherent or linked to a particular set of immovable beliefs, when, instead, people tend to base their views on other contingencies. Will this change our lives? Will it make our lives better, safer, more harmonious and prosperous, or the opposite (Macdonald Reference Macdonaldforthcoming)? These are largely pragmatic calculations in that they are based on the maintenance of systems of mutual social and economic support and obligation, in the context of a state that is regarded as largely absent and/or corrupt and hostile.
The broader significance of this for transitional justice is clear. A misunderstanding (wilful or otherwise) of these dynamics creates a huge disjuncture between an imagined ‘local’, artificially constructed in service of a broader transitional justice vision, and lived realities in which the ‘local’ is a complex, often turbulent terrain of social, political and economic ideas and activity. Justice-sector donors in Uganda, who fund the ICD and broader transitional justice goals, speak selectively about an Acholi need and desire for retributive punishment, access to formal justice procedures, and human rights guarantees. Meanwhile, local leaders and some NGOs promote an equally selective vision of an alternative justice system – one in which Acholi people are forgiving and willing to reconcile and reintegrate with former combatants through cultural processes. Both articulations of ‘Acholi’ needs and desires are polarized, de-politicized, de-economized and de-temporalized. The reality is that people across Acholiland base their interpretations of Kwoyelo and his trial on two things: first, on the moral jurisdiction and probity of the institution responsible for forming judgment and overseeing punishment; and second, on the impact these processes will have on social harmony in post-conflict life.
Rather than grapple with this complexity, some transitional justice advocates have tended to try to offset epistemological differences through procedural pluralism, hence the popularity of ‘holistic’ transitional justice across the continent, which incorporates formal ‘retributive’ criminal processes and informal ‘restorative’ reconciliatory processes. This faith in ‘holism’, we suggest, needs re-thinking. It is not a silver bullet that will make transitional justice more context-sensitive because it does not adequately address foundational assumptions. These continue to be based on idealistic norms rather than on genuine engagement with ‘intersubjectively constructed concepts’ that inform people's perspectives on post-conflict justice (Gauri et al. Reference Gauri, Woolcock and Desai2013).
Such assumptions are hardly unique to the Acholi context, and generalizations about the post-conflict justice proclivities of entire ‘victim’ populations, from Sierra Leone to DRC, are not unusual.Footnote 67 What we argue for here is a careful interrogation of the category of victim, and better understanding of the composite nature of the category. The question then remains: how should transitional justice advocates integrate the divergent opinions of victims in their programming? A good start would be to develop an evidence-based understanding of the ‘victim’ category in any given situation. Transitional justice, as espoused and implemented by international agencies, claims to be ‘victim-centred’, but this can be disingenuous and regularly involves post facto instrumentalization of an ‘imagined victim’ or ‘symbolic beneficiary’ to justify programmes that are already in motion (McEvoy and McConnachie Reference McEvoy and McConnachie2013: 494–7). Uganda's transitional justice framework emphasizes a ‘victim-centered’ approach (JLOS 2012: 11), yet we know that the ICD was not set up as a ‘response to the explicit needs of victims, as defined by victims themselves’ (Robins Reference Robins2011: 77).
Existing transitional justice approaches are prescribed with skewed and limited appreciation of existing conceptions of crime, practices of justice in context, and how best to engage them. The case of Kwoyelo shows the importance of looking at war crimes and available options for redress in the political, socio-economic and institutional context in which they occur, rather than considering them as divorced from the rest of lived realities. A more sustained engagement with local populations would most likely reveal something rather inconvenient to transitional justice advocates: that it is irresponsible to promise all victims that they ‘will have their voices heard’ and that it is ‘impossible to do justice to all of the voices of victims affected by past violence’ (McEvoy and McConnachie Reference McEvoy and McConnachie2013: 497). A more honest and constructive approach would acknowledge that transitional justice is not a technical legal intervention, but rather a field ‘defined by struggle and born of experience’ (Gready and Robins Reference Gready and Robins2014: 354). At best, it can provide an opportunity for an open-ended political and economic dialogue that accepts difference and engages seriously with local as well as state and global notions of peace and just social order; at worst it represents an externally devised intervention that is inappropriate for those most affected by violence.
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
The authors would like to thank Ronald Atkinson, Tim Allen, Deval Desai and Julian Hopwood for helpful comments on earlier drafts of this paper. We are very grateful to the two anonymous readers for such constructive comments and engagement with the text. We would also like to thank Owor Arthur and Dorothy Atim for research assistance. This article draws on research funded by the Justice and Security Research Programme (JSRP) at the London School of Economics and Political Science (LSE), through the UK Department for International Development (DFID) grant contract PO5729.