UGANDA: Nightmares spoil the dreams of returnees
Source: IRIN
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GULU, 7 November 2007 (IRIN) - The nightmares have begun again for Viola Lakwac. Ever since she left a camp for displaced people to move closer to
her land in northern Uganda, she has found her sleep haunted by memories of the Lord's Resistance Army. "I have these dreams and I always find a light flickering on my eyes and then someone comes
and sets light to my hut and if I try and get up I can't - I'm powerless," she says, sitting in the shade of the trees near her new hut at Paibona, a resettlement site in eastern Gulu district. "This
never happened in the camp." The 67-year-old is not alone in her distress. As more people start moving back to their villages from the camps, there are increasing reports of hallucinations,
depression and psycho-social difficulties. Return to the homestead the light at the end of this dark period of Ugandan history may not be the panacea so many had hoped.
Some mental health professionals say they fear an increase in psychological trauma as painful memories are stirred up when people return to the site of atrocities deep in the bush without proper help. Those now housed in Paibona started moving from Awach camp in the first half of 2007. While not yet home, the new village is far more spacious than the old camp. Their farmlands are not far away and
villagers are no longer reliant on food aid. But Paibona has its own troubles. Many newcomers say they are plagued by ghosts and hallucinations. Some have even returned to Awach. "It's very
difficult to stay here," confides Lakwac, talking about her flashbacks to the LRA attack on her home nearby. "During those days they would come at night, killing and torturing people. They would
burn the huts - they burnt my hut but thank God I managed to run. But my child died there. "I remember the bright flames and they come back to me in my sleep." Sometimes Lakwac visits what's left
of her old house, 4km away, and the memories come flooding back. "I felt so sick and feverish." There is a mass grave in the area, which makes her even more reluctant to return home as a widow.
"I'll go back if other people do but not on my own - I'd really prefer to stay here." She is surrounded by friends: "We talk about our problems freely. I think the majority of people here have
problems with it because we all have memories of this war. This has become our sickness," she says to nods of agreement. Not quite home Paibona is far from unique in northern Uganda. People are
leaving over-crowded camps and heading back to their original parishes but in the absence of a final peace agreement between the government and the LRA, most are staying in "resettlement sites"
smaller, more spacious camps from where they can access their land. People are back in the fields, tilling the soil, and in so doing, peeling back the layers of this brutal conflict, disturbing
bones, bodies and memories. Thomas Oyok, chief clinical psychiatrist at Gulu General Hospital, says he fears he has only seen the tip of the iceberg because so many traumatised returnees are beyond
the reach of institutions such as his. "We are getting more and more post-traumatic stress disorder [PTSD] and depression. Suicide is on the increase with people going home. But we are not quite sure
why this is the case." He thinks isolation may be a factor. "When they are together they try to support each other but on their own there is fear - and PTSD is very much related to fear and
emotions. That fear comes back and you again recall the things that happened when you were forced to leave your homestead." Oyok says that while a return home is welcome for most people it is
nonetheless a disruption which can trigger "adjustment disorders". "There has been a great deal of family dislocation," Oyok says. "When you go home you find your relatives no longer there." Loneliness and isolation The loneliness of the fields is what eats at Patrick Acelam, 30. He has been in Paibona for three months. "In the camp there were many people together but here I can be
alone for a long time and that is when the ghosts come to attack me." His ghosts are the people he killed during the war. The memories that haunt former soldiers the most are of friends or family
they were forced to betray: the neighbour they toiled alongside in the fields; the boy they played under the mango tree; or the girl they chatted up collecting water. Acelam remembers how he was
forced to kill one of his closest friends in the LRA a man with whom he shared his food. "He was tied to a tree and beaten with a stick until he died. In the daytime I can just get a vision of
him coming back to kill me. "At night my wife tells me I talk to myself and start crying. When I was in the main camp it didn't disturb me. But here it can disturb me anywhere even when I'm digging
in the field. "It always happens when I'm alone but sometimes I find it happens when my eyes start closing and I have to go somewhere else." Bosco Oyo has similar flashbacks from his three years
in the bush. He talks of the friend he was abducted with, who he then tied to a stake and beat to death. "He calls out my name. I went to rehabilitation but each time he comes back to me and the
others come back and I wake up screaming." For Oyo, the quieter life of the resettlement site has brought some respite. The soldiers are not around any more to trigger memories of the firefights in
the bush; there is less noise; but he worries about going home. "Here I have friends and they keep me well. But I was abducted from near my home and if I went back there on my own the memories would
come back. I can go back some time but I'm not ready yet." Ben Porter, technical adviser on psycho-social support to the Concerned Parents' Association, a local NGO set up by parents of abducted
children, says mental health facilities in the north cannot begin to meet the needs of those now readying to return there, estimated to number more than a million. "There are no formal training
institutions in the north right now [dealing with psycho-social support]. We have only two counsellors in the north with Master's degrees in counselling," he says, arguing that returned rebels need
their "minds disarmed" as well as their weapons. "For 95 percent, being given a hoe and school fees will be enough," he says. "But there is the 5 percent who are really struggling - who use their
pangas against their neighbours rather than cutting their grass." Porter is training local volunteers from parent support groups in several basic support methods from counselling to traditional
healing and is putting together a regional group to see how psycho-social support can be made to work better in the north. Oyok insists that sometimes drug treatment will be necessary but says with
so many people affected and unable to access formal healthcare, any policy solution must involve "trans-cultural psycho-social organisations, opinion leaders and community workers". He says some of
the increase in depression may be caused not only by war experiences but by the inability to adjust to new circumstances and live up to the cultural expectations of responsibility. "People have
developed a dependency in the camps and now some can't manage on their own," he says. "There are 24-year-olds who haven't ever held a hoe there are expectations that some will find difficult to
live up to." Bad spirits? Oyo is clear about what causes his flashbacks: "I don't think this is supernatural," he says. "This is a mental problem. And I think most people here understand that." Most people might. But ask the villagers of Paibona what needs to be done to remedy the situation and top of the list is ritual cleansing. "This is part of our culture and it works," says Anthony
Opwa, whose brother went through the process after killing friends in the LRA. "He did the cleansing and he was fine, he went back to the school and became a good man." In Acholi cultures, cleansing
is called for after the commission of a crime or contact with the dead, whose "cen" or spirit is said to haunt. But a cleansing ceremony can only be performed if a body can be identified and
relatives contacted. Paibona villagers say that fear of finding untraceable bodies in the bush is keeping people from returning to some areas where it is known that many people were killed. Thirty-year-old Samuel Oketa tells of how he has seen his younger brother suffer from symptoms very similar to PTSD since returning from the bush, becoming increasingly isolated and troubled. But he
puts the difficulties down not to the killings he committed but to the unknown remains he found before he was abducted. "He can start fighting for no reason or he can just be sitting there and start
crying. Now he has turned to drink, which only makes his problem worse. It's getting worse here in the village because there aren't many people so he is becoming more isolated - he stays alone and he
isn't speaking to anyone. "When a ritual has to be done the relatives of the deceased must be known. But the bodies he found were of rebels killed during an ambush - the bones are still there.
We need to do a ritual cleansing for the bush. We would give him raw intestines to eat but we need to know whose body it is first." For Opwa, it is the cultural leaders who have to take a lead: "The
most important thing is for the Rwots [tradional leaders] to come together and organise rituals for these people." ed/mw/am© IRIN. All rights reserved. More humanitarian news and analysis: http://www.IRINnews.org








