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                     Ugandan President Yoweri Museveni said Rwanda must keep the Mweya ceasefire agreement of August 17th. He warned Rwanda to that the UPDF (Uganda's military) in the Congo would attack "if provoked" by Rwandans. Fighting between Ugandan and Rwandan forces in the Congo broke out on August 14th at the Bangoka airport. Uganda backs the Congolese Rally for Democracy (RCD) faction headed by Ernest Wamba dia Wamba. Rwanda backs a Goma, Congo-based faction of the RCD headed by Emile Ilunga. Museveni said Uganda believes the Rwandas started the fighting because they intended to assassinate Wamba dia Wamba. Uganda says it lost 38 soldiers in the fighting and estimates the Rwandans lost 100.
 August 28; A bomb exploded in a suburb of Kampala. It was the ninth bomb explosion in Kampala this year. The earlier bomb attacks have been linked (by the Ugandan government) to "terrorist groups based in western Uganda."
 August 25; A Sudanese transport flew over northern Uganda, was fired on by government anti-aircraft guns, then turned around and flew back to the Sudan. Relations between Sudan and Uganda have been strained for some time. Rawanda and Uganda agreed to exchange a hundred prisoners of war taken during the three day battle between their forces in the Congo between the 14th and 17th of August.As many as 200 Ugandan soldiers died in that battle.
 August 24; Army troops fought a group of rebels of the Allied Democratic Fromt (ADF), 450 kilometers west of the capital, Kampala. One soldier and 15 rebels were killed. All of the dead rebels were armed. The ADF rebels had been terrorizing the area for several days, after crossing the Congolese border. The ADF maintains bases in the Congo. The ADF has been active for some two years.
 August 20; Uganda has accused it's erstwhile ally Rawanda of attacking Ugandan troops in order to capture Ugandan backed Congolese rebels leader Wamba dia Wamba. 
         August 14; The army has        orders to shoot on sight any members of the Karamojong tribe seen carrying        guns outside their villages. The army is demanding the ringleaders of the        raids that killed over a hundred people. The army is reluctant to disarm        the Karamojong, because armed tribes in neighboring Kenya and Sudan would        then attack the defenseless Karamojong. All the tribes in the region have        long standing feuds that have, in the past, led to the extermination of        the weaker tribes. The army also noted that 5,000 heavily armed Turkana        tribesmen were reported moving into Uganda from Kenya.
       August 12; The        government has sent 4,000 troops in the northwest where tribal strife has        killed over a hundred people in the last two weeks. Most of the fighting        is between rival clans of the Karamojong tribe, which considers cattle rustling a traditional activity. But the fights over stolen cattle        often turn into massacres, as happened in this case. Over 70 children were        slaughtered in raids on villages by clan warriors.
       July 29; Government        troops seize, at gunpoint, a hundred stolen cattle from Karamojong        tribesmen.
       July        20; Government troops raided a rebel camp in northern Uganda, killing        three rebels, including for Ugandan brigadier general Opon Acak, and        captured three. About three dozen other rebels escaped.. General Acak had        founded a new rebel movement recently, calling for traditional multi-party        democracy in Uganda.
       July        13: In an operation typical of the unsettled situation in Uganda, 23        people died as troops, local vigilantes and rustlers died during an        attempt to recover stolen livestock. Cattle raiding between tribes is an        ancient tradition. But it became much more widespread since the 1970s,        when tribal warriors got their hands on AK-47s and other modern small        arms.
       July 10; Members of the        Karamojong tribe ambushed an army patrol, killing fourteen soldiers and        wounding twelve.
       Rebels        in the bush have proved difficult to eliminate, mainly because the rebels        have increasingly operated like bandits rather than a political movement.        Allied Democratic Forces (ADF) is the principal organized rebel force.        This group is actually a combination of two separate organizations; Tabliq        Islamist sect and the National Army for the Liberation of Uganda (NALU).        The ADF has been fighting the government since November 1996. The ADF        maintain bases in the Ruwenzori Mountains, which lay astride the border        between Uganda and the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC). It is this use        of the Congo as a hiding place that brought Ugandan troops into the        current Congolese civil war.