Betty Oyella Bigombe

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Bigombe has liased with the LRA rebels.
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Bigombe has liased with the LRA rebels.

Betty Oyella Bigombe is a former Uganda government minister and consultant to the World Bank. She is an ethnic Acholi and has been involved in peace negotiations to end the insurgency of the Lord's Resistance Army (LRA) of Uganda since 1994. As of 2005 she was acting as chief mediator between the LRA and government of Uganda. She has a masters degree from the Kennedy School of Government at Harvard University. As well as English and Acholi, she speaks Kiswahili and Japanese.

Bigombe was elected a minister of parliament in 1986, a post she would hold until 1996. In 1988, President Yoweri Museveni appointed her "Minister of State for Pacification of Northern Uganda, Resident in Gulu," a post in which she was tasked with convincing the LRA rebels to give up their struggle. Protests at the connotations of the word "pacification" led to the renaming of the post to "Minister of State in the Office of the Prime Minister, Resident in Northern Uganda." Following the failure of military efforts to defeat the rebels, Bigombe initiated contact with rebel leader Joseph Kony in June 1993. This began what would be known as the "Bigombe talks". In 1993 she was named Uganda's Woman of the Year for her efforts to end the violence. Despite meeting with Kony, the talks collapsed in February 1994.[1] Soon afterward the insurgency intensified and no significant efforts towards peace would be made for the next decade. She was also assisted in the peace efforts between Uganda and Sudan.

She failed to win the parliamentary seat for Gulu Municipality in 1996 and left government service.[2] In 1997, she took a fellowship award at the Harvard Institute for International Development. She then became a senior social scientist with the Postconflict unit at the World Bank and then a consultant to the Bank's Social Protection and Human Development units. She has co-authored several articles on post-conflict peacebuilding and the impact of conflict on women and children. From at least March 2004 to 2005, Bigombe was the chief mediator in a new peace initiative with the Lord's Resistance Army. After its failure, she did not become a key figure in the Juba talks that began in mid-2006.

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