OCHAN: a friend to ‘silent victims’ of war
Have you followed the story of the former high school girl, Catherine Ajok, who, at age 13 in October 1996, was abducted from her school in Apac District of Northern Uganda by rebels of the Lord’s Resistance Army (LRA)? While in captivity Ajok became one of several dozens of forced wives of Joseph Kony, the spiritual leader of LRA. He passed her on to his junior officer after impregnating her and replaced her with a more recent, younger abductee. In October 2009, Ajok was rescued in neighboring Democratic Republic of Congo where the LRA is hiding from international authorities under the thick canopy of Garamba Forest and continues its predations on local populations. Ajok was brought back to her parents’ care in Uganda. A remarkable part of Ajok’s story is simply that she lived to tell it after so many years in captivity. Hundreds of other young ‘silent victims’ of LRA were not as fortunate. The bell of grief continues to toll for families of boys and girls still unaccounted for.
OCHAN is in Northern Uganda to help war victims and their families reclaim their lives through improved health care, more secure housing, and green commerce to stimulate their home economy once again. Introducing reforestation as a long-term means to safeguard the local environment from effects of a wood-based economy and climate change is OCHAN’s long-term commitment to their future.

