It’s very unlikely, according to Mr. Okello-Oryem, Uganda’s minister of State for Foreign Affairs. Many of you will have heard the recent rumors of Kony’s desire for peace.The BBC article below investigates the likely roots of these claims. To note:

1. These rumors started with a letter supposedly from Kony, published in the private Ugandan newspaper Daily Monitor.

2. Mr. Okello-Oryem told the BBC that a man called Mission Okello (that’s a different Okello) was behind the communication, and may or may not have been acting on behalf of Joseph Kony. Mr Okello-Oryem attempted to set up a telephone conversation with Kony. Kony never called.

3. Mr. Okello-Oryem believes that if Kony was serious about peace the two of them would have already spoken.

The article highlights the Juba peace talks that took place in 2008, which Kony used as an opportunity to re-arm and continue fighting.

The full article is below:

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Uganda doubts LRA’s Joseph Kony serious about talks

kony

Uganda’s government says it doubts rebel leader Joseph Kony is serious about peace after he purportedly sent a letter asking for forgiveness and calling for talks.

Government official Henry Okello-Oryem said a telephone conversation arranged with Mr. Kony had failed to materialize.

The letter reportedly saw Mr. Kony say his Lord’s Resistance Army (LRA) rebel group was committed to “end this war”.

It has waged an insurgency for more than 20 years.

It is notorious for abducting children to serve as sex slaves and child soldiers.

‘Peace envoy’

Mr Kony is wanted by the International Criminal Court (ICC) for alleged war crimes.

Several thousand African troops, backed by 100 US special forces, have been hunting him and other fighters of the LRA across the region.

The US has offered up to $5m (£3.3m) for leads resulting in his arrest.

Talks between the government and LRA collapsed in 2008 after the ICC refused to yield to Mr Kony’s demand to drop the arrest warrant.

“I want to assure the people of Uganda that, we are committed to a sustainable peaceful political settlement of our long war with the government of [President Yoweri] Museveni,” Mr Kony is quoted as saying in the purported letter, published in Uganda’s privately owned Daily Monitor newspaper.

“We are willing and ready to forgive and seek forgiveness, and continue to seek peaceful means to end this war which has cut across a swathe of Africa for the people of the Great Lakes and the Nile-Congo Basin to find peace.”

Mr Okello-Oryem, Uganda’s Minister of State for Foreign Affairs, told the BBC that Mission Okello, a man claiming to represent the rebel leader, was behind the latest initiative.

He had agreed to a time and date to hold a telephone conversation with Mr Kony, but it never happened, Mr Okello-Oryem said.

Mr Okello told him Mr Kony was worried that US satellites operating in the neighbouring Central African Republic (CAR) and the region would locate him, the minister said.

Mr Okello told the BBC the conversation had not taken place because of technical problems.

But Mr Okello-Oryem said he was not sure whether Mr Okello was a genuine representative of Mr Kony, and if the LRA leader was serious about peace the two of them would have already spoken.

The LRA was forced out of Uganda in 2005 and since then has wreaked havoc in CAR and other neighbouring states.

Mr Kony claims the LRA’s mission is to install a government in Uganda based on the Biblical Ten Commandments.

In November, then-CAR ruler Michel Djotodia said his government was in talks with him about his surrender.

However, African diplomats cast doubts on Mr Djotodia’s claim.

Mr Djotodia resigned as CAR interim president earlier this month.