Aboke Explained

Official Name:Aboke
Settlement Type:Municipality
Pushpin Map:Uganda
Pushpin Label Position:bottom
Pushpin Map Caption:Location in Uganda
Subdivision Type:Country
Subdivision Name: Uganda
Subdivision Type1:Region
Subdivision Name1:Northern Region of Uganda
Subdivision Type2:Sub-region
Subdivision Name2:Lango sub-region
Subdivision Type3:District
Subdivision Name3:Kole District
Leader Title:Mayor
Unit Pref:Imperial
Population As Of:2014 Census
Population Blank1 Title:Ethnicities
Population Blank2 Title:Religions
Coordinates:2.3578°N 32.6831°W
Elevation M:1042

Aboke is a town in the Kole District of the Northern Region of Uganda. It was the location of the Aboke abductions in October 1996.[1]

Location

Aboke is located in Akwiridid Parish, Aboke sub-county, Kole District, in the Lango sub-region, in Northern Uganda. It is approximately 29km (18miles), by road, north-west of the city of Lira, the largest urban centre in the sub-region. This is approximately 73km (45miles), by road, southeast of the city of Gulu, the largest urban centre in Northern Uganda. The geographical coordinates of Aboke are:02°21'28.0"N, 32°40'59.0"E (Latitude:2.357778; Longitude:32.683056). Aboke sits at an average elevation of 1042m (3,419feet) above sea level.[2]

Overview

Aboke lies on the old Lira-Gulu Road, just north of the Okole River. The town is the location of the five-parish Aboke sub-county. The parishes in Aboke sub-county are: (a) Akwiridid (b) Apach (c) Apuru (d) Ogwangacuma and (e) Opeta.[3]

The town is also the location of St. Mary's College Aboke Girls School, a residential girls-only secondary school administered by Italian nuns. It is at this school that the Aboke abductions occurred on the early morning of 10 October 1996.[4]

Abductions

See main article: Aboke abductions.

The Lord's Resistance Army (LRA), the rebel group which started in January 1987 by Joseph Kony, began as a liberation group aimed at removing the National Resistance Movement led by Yoweri Museveni from power.[5]

In the early 1990s the LRA began to receive support and supplies from the government of Sudan at that time. The character of the LRA changed. The rebels began to target civilians, mutilating those they thought to be government sympathisers and abducting children as child soldiers and sex slaves.[5]

In the early morning hours of 10 October 1996, an estimated 300 rebels of the LRA invaded St Mary’s College Secondary School Aboke and abducted 139 young girls aged 13 to 16 years of age. Sister Rachele Frassera, an Italian nun and deputy headmistress at the school, followed the rebels and negotiated the release of 109 girls. They kept the other 30 as sex slaves for their commanders.[4] [5] [6]

Four of the girls died in captivity while the remaining 26 eventually returned to their families in Uganda. Many had babies fathered by the rebels, including Kony. Catherine Ajok escaped on 14 December 2008, when the Uganda People's Defence Force bombed the LRA base in Garamba National Park, DR Congo. She arrived at their base in Dungu in March 2009.[4]

See also

External links

3.4739°N 32.0678°W

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Who are the Aboke girls? . . 27 March 2009 . Conan Businge . 24 April 2020 . Kampala.
  2. Web site: Elevation of Aboke, Uganda . Floodmap.net . 24 April 2020 . Flood Map . 24 April 2020.
  3. Web site: The Parishes In Aboke Subcounty, Kole District, Uganda . 24 April 2020 . Land Conflict Mapping Tool . 24 April 2020 . Land Conflict Mapping Tool.
  4. Web site: When Kony Turned Aboke Students Into Wives . . 10 October 2019 . New Vision . 24 April 2020 . Kampala.
  5. Web site: Background: the Lord's Resistance Army . 20 October 2007 . . Xan Rice . 24 April 2020 . London.
  6. Web site: Recollections of the Aboke girls abduction . . 31 January 2013 . Bamuturaki Musinguzi . 24 April 2020 . Kampala.