UNHCR concerned about frequency and brutality of guerrilla attacks by LRA.

Johannesburg, May 18 .- The United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) today voiced concern about the frequency and brutality of the attacks of the last months of the Ugandan armed group Lord's Liberation Army (LRA), which accused of killing thousands of people in countries of the area.

In a statement released today, the UNHCR recalls the actions of, sto energy credits, the LRA in the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC), Central African Republic (CAR) and Sudan, since he was expelled from Uganda in 2006.

Bands isolated from members of the LRA, according to UNHCR, remote villages frequently attack and dnseless, and "this makes their atrocities remain ignored for long periods of time."

According to the note, only entrer on 20 March and, ffxiv gil, 6 May last, the LRA has carried out at least ten attacks in the RCA, which has confirmed the deaths of 36 people and about 10,000 have fled their villages , of which 411 have sought refuge in the DRC.

In the DRC, between 22 and 26 February in the eastern provinces, the LRA massacred more than 100 people in, cheap kinah, an area that has been the victim of numerous attacks by the group.

The center of activity of the LRA in the DRC have been the provinces of Upper and Lower Uele, where since December 2008 has killed more than 1,800 people, about 2,500 abducted and 280,000 displaced, most of them in 2009.

The LRA has also forced some 20,000 Congolese to seek refuge in Sudan and the Central African Republic.

In Sudan, said UNHCR, the LRA massacred and forced 2,500 people to 87,000 displaced within the country, aside from forcing many people to flee to areas bordering Uganda, the DRC and the CAR.

Since its creation 23 years ago, the LRA, one of the most bloodthirsty and cruel of Africa, has sown terror in Uganda, where he was expelled in 2006 and moved to nearby countries.

Group leader, Joseph Kony, and two of his surviving lieutenants are wanted for the International Criminal Court (ICC) since 2005 for crimes against humanity.

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