CHAPTER
FOUR
MOUNTAIN
MEN
By
the spring of 2013, the legend of Akram Kebir had once again spread
to every corner of Afghanistan. His name was whispered in fields and
market places and NATO bases. Every news channel in the world yearned
for a face to face interview. Every editor in the world was ready and
willing to pay top dollar for a photo. Any photo. The Americans had
raised the price on Akram's head to $5 million. Every night tens of
thousands of NATO soldiers hoped and prayed he would stay clear of
their sector.
Nobody
ever knew where he was. He moved through the mountains like a ghost.
Drones silently spent every minute of every day gliding over the
vastness of the mountains. Elite soldiers patrolled for weeks on end
and never found so much as an empty plastic bottle.
For
weeks there would be nothing and then one day a patrol would be
ripped apart by a string of well set IED's and yet more NATO troops
would be cut apart by equally carefully arranged cross fire.
Akram
and his men had by now been responsible for the death of 43 NATO
troops from four nations. They had killed Americans, French, Italians
and British. A further 172 soldiers had been wounded to various
degrees and removed from the field.
Intelligence
officers burned the midnight oil trying to second guess Akram's
movements. What was the size and makeup of his force? How many
vehicles did he have? Did he have a main command bunker somewhere?
How was he re-supplied? How did he communicate with the Taliban
leadership? They were certain his group numbered between 200 and 400
and they simply couldn't understand how so many fighters could manage
to remain so invisible.
Most
troubling of all to the analysts was the period between June 2009 and
September 2011 when there had been no evidence of any activity
whatsoever. Where had Kebir been for all that time? Over the border
in Waziristan? Or maybe Iran or Yemen? Was Kebir still fighting for
the Taliban or had he used this time to make connections with groups
with more global ambitions? Nobody could discover any kind of clue.
He just vanished.
And
then in the autumn of 2011 the killing started up again.
If
they had known the truth, they would probably have buried it. The
truth would have astounded them. The truth would have made them want
to smash up their computers and scream in frustration. For Akram
Kebir did not have between 200 and 400 fighters under his command.
And he did not have a well-hidden command bunker. His band had never
been greater than 20 and by 2013 it numbered a mere 13. He had spent
the lost years laying down a chain of supply caches which contained
enough arms and ammunition to maintain the group for ten years. The
last time he had met with the Taliban leadership had been in February
2009 when he had informed them of his long term plan to operate alone
and like a ghost. He had told them there would be no kind of contact
and he would undertake the task of killing the Kuffar. He demanded
money and they gave him $100,000 in well used notes. And then he was
gone in the night. The Taliban leadership were as much in the dark
about his whereabouts as NATO command.
Akram
never stopped moving. He never spent more than one night in the same
place. He only allowed fires to be lit when there was enough thick
cloud cover to hide the group from the drones. They were mountain men
who could cover twice as much ground as any Special Forces pursuers.
Not one of his men had slept in any kind of building in more than
five years. They didn't just blend into the landscape. They were the
landscape.
By
the spring of 2013, the boy Omar was long gone. The man Omar was
brutally fit. His face was dark and hard. The months of blisters and
legs screaming with pain were by now a forgotten memory. His uncle
gave his famous name to their deeds, but it was the magic in Omar's
fingers which made the group so effective. The Mujahideen had been
laying IED's since 1980, but nobody had ever perfected the art like
Omar. His devices never fizzled and failed. He applied his brain and
anticipated how his targets would react like he was playing a high
explosive version of chess. He always seemed to know what the NATO
troops were going to do before they knew it themselves.
Primary
blast, secondary blast, kill zone and out. No engagement ever lasted
for more than sixty seconds. The towering silence of the mountains
would be broken by an eruption of savage sound and fury and then the
silence would return. By the time the helicopters would swoop down to
gather up the wounded, Akram and his men would be gone.
Omar
was a part of a group within the group. For many years he and Akram's
two sons, Faisal and Tariq, had set themselves apart. They were the
youngest by many years. For the first two years, Akram had ordered
his sons to stick to their cousin like a second skin to ensure he
didn't try to escape. But eventually, things had changed. Akram
became convinced his nephew had grown into a true Mujahid. He was
happy for the young men of the group to be a group apart. All the
other men had fought the Russians alongside Akram and spent the long
cold nights remembering old battles.
Akram
trusted the nine older fighters who at been at his side for thirty
years and more, but he only trusted them 99%. He only trusted family
100%.
Every night he would pass the bag of used dollars to his two
sons who would find a place to hide it. For three years he wouldn't
allow Omar to join them in with this task but eventually he accepted
the son of his brother as real family.
The
leader never had the first suspicion of the slow mutiny being plotted
by his nephew and his sons. Such a thing was beyond his
comprehension. Any fighter who tried to slip away would be tracked
down and executed. There was nowhere to run. Not for the old
fighters. Not for his nephew. Not for his sons. Their Jihad would
continue until the Kuffar left Afghanistan.
It
had taken Omar years of patient work to bring his cousins round to
embracing the idea of escape. When Obama and the other NATO leaders
had announced a timetable to leave, they had waited for Akram to tell
the group it was time to leave the mountains and return to their
lives. He didn't. Instead, he told them they would keep on killing
until there was nobody left to kill.
It
was enough for Faisal and Tariq to swear a blood oath to their
cousin. When their opportunity came they vowed to take it.
The
hoped-for opportunity started to emerge on a snowy afternoon in
January when they successfully wiped out a six man patrol from the
American 82nd Airborne Division. The blizzard was so
intense they had more time than usual to take anything useful from
the corpses. Omar took an iPhone from the breast pocket of a dead
Latino and hid it away.
It
took him two months to perfect an escape plan. In the phone's memory,
the most promising number was 'Major Collins'. Omar was pretty sure a
Major would never be a part of a six man search and destroy patrol
which meant the man was still alive. Maybe he was based close by in
Afghanistan. Maybe he was in America. Omar came up with a plan which
made the Major's location irrelevant.
At
ten past six on a cold evening, the group stopped in a wooded area to
lay up for the night. Akram gave the money bag to Faisal just like
always. The text message to the American Major had been typed and
ready for several weeks as Omar waited for the right moment.
The
moment had arrived. He checked nobody was watching and pressed
'Send'. Once the phone assured him the message had been delivered, he
hid the phone under a rock and joined his cousins.
“Dear
Major Collins. I am part of the group who attacked your patrol on 6
January 2013. I am with Akram Kebir. This phone marks his location.
You have 30 minutes to arrange an air strike. Any longer and he will
disappear. You need to be fast.”
Omar
and his two cousins moved fast in fading light. By the time they
heard the approaching pair of F16's they had covered nearly two miles
in twenty minutes. They paused and stared down the steep slope as the
planes sent four rockets into the phone signal. For a few seconds,
the enormous sound of the explosions bounced around the towering
peaks and then there was silence.
They
shared the moment and then started their long walk.
Six
months later they arrived at the refugee camp on the outskirts of
Calais known to one and all as 'The Jungle'.
CHAPTER
FIVE
THE
BEST GOAT HERDER IN OBONGI
Ah.
Moses,
Moses, Moses.
I'm
afraid I am going to have to claim a rather large slice of artistic
license to get into the back story of Moses Mdumba. Sorry. I guess
you'll either live with it or bin the whole thing right here and
right now. I have just finished my so called interview with Moses. To
call the encounter an interview would be pushing it a bit. Pushing it
a lot in fact.
Basically,
I wittered on and Moses just sat there and smiled. He smiles a lot
and when he smiles he looks about fifteen years old. When he does a
stern face, he could almost pass for eighteen. Neither of these age
estimates come close to the truth. Moses is unsure as to the exact
date of his birth and I am certainly not about to head out to
Northern Uganda to dig around in the records.
His
best guess is somewhere around 1998. Which makes him thirty three
now.
Let's
be frank here. Let's call a spade a spade. Moses doesn't really do talking.
I have asked the other guys if he has ever done talking. All I get
are grins and shaking heads. Moses? Talking? Come on....
So
what am I to do? Well, I suppose I will do my best to take the bits
and pieces he has given me and add them to some research and then try
to knit it into my best approximation of his back story. Fair enough?
Well, it will have to be.
So.
Moses Mdumba was born in a village called Obongi in Northern Uganda
in 1998. Or thereabouts. He has no memory of his father who died of
malaria when Moses was still an infant. He had an older brother,
Abraham.
The
family had a thatched hut, six cows, twelve chickens, an acre of
land, and a flock of twenty three goats. The lack of a man in the
house guaranteed the family was always poor. Food was short and they
knew none of the luxuries of the modern world. Neither boy ever
attended school and their day to day lives were all about work, not
play.
When
Moses was five years old he was given the job of taking the goats to
their grazing and bringing them home at the end of the day. To switch
on the famous Moses smile, all you need to do is say the word 'goat'.
The very thought of goats animates him like nothing else. Not that
this obvious enthusiasm ever leads to many words. All I got was a few
snapped out sentences.
“I
liked the goats very much. I think I can understand goats very
nicely. My goats they like Moses. They love Moses. I was the very
best goat herder in Obongi. This is true.”
And
I have no reason to doubt him. I have a picture of the five year old
Moses leading his small flock of goats out into a flat baked plain
where the only shade was provided by a scattering of Acacia trees.
I
asked Moses about Obongi and I didn't get much.
“Obongi,
he is very small. Very dry. He is not like Scottish.”
So
I Googled and I didn't get much more. An off the map village in an
off the map part of the world. Had he ever been anywhere else?
“One
day my Mummy she take me and Abraham to Gulu. He is big town. Not big
like Scottish but big.”
So.
One trip to Gulu and the rest of his boyhood days herding the family
flock of twenty three goats.
And
then when he was eight years old and his brother Abraham was ten
years old, Joseph Kony's men came for them in the night.
“I
was sleeping. There is big shouting. I am waking. And Kony men they
are here. One man, he is holding my brother very hard. The other
man...."
And
as the words dried on his lips his eyes locked onto his take on the
thousand yard stare. A thousand yards of dried earth and half starved
goats picking away at wispy vegetation. A burning blue sky. A dust
devil in the far distance.
“....
the other man kill my mummy. He kill her with machete. And they take
me out of this hut. And my brother. They take us.”
They
took them. The followers of Joseph Kony. The soldiers of his 'Lords
Resistance Army.' If you Google 'Joseph Kony' you will find a hell of
a lot more than if you Google 'Obongi'. Not many know Kony's name
now, but twenty years ago his was a name synonymous with the very
darkest corners of the human soul. If you had Googled his name in
2012 you would have found him to be number one of the list of the
most wanted men in the world. He took that particular slot on the day
Seal Team Six dispatched Osama Bin Laden. It was the day Joseph Kony
moved from number two to number one.
Who
was he? He was the son of a priest who morphed into a murderous
psychopath. He claimed to have the ear of God and he established his
ramshackle army to resist the undoubted atrocities the Ugandan
government were committing in the north of Uganda in the 80's and
90's. Maybe in the early days, Kony was indeed a genuine resistance
fighter. But any such credibility didn't last for very long. His
modus operandi was that of a textbook monster. His forces marauded
and murdered and raped. His idea of conscription was to kidnap
children and indoctrinate them through a mix of drug cocktails and
brain washing. He forced them to commit atrocities whilst the other
child soldiers egged them on. If they carried out the task, they
became a part of the army. If they failed they were killed. Boys were
drilled as warriors. Girls were used as sex slaves.
When
Moses and Abraham were taken in the night, Kony was at the zenith of
his power. The LRA was counted in the thousands, most of them child
soldiers. They wreaked their havoc all across Northern Uganda and for
a while there was little the Government in Kampala could do to stop
them.
“Did
you do bad things, Moses?"
“Yes.
I did very bad things.”
“Is
it something you can talk about?”
“No.
I cannot talk about this one.”
And
suddenly the stare was of the two thousand yard variety.
“And
Abraham? Did he do bad things?”
“No.
My brother he would not do this one. They kill him."
Christ.
What can you say? If you know, well please send the answer on a
postcard care of my publishers. I said nothing. I just reached out
and took his hard calloused black hand in my soft journalist white
hand. And his eyes looked straight through me and all the way to a
place only he could see. Or not see.
Moses
was a soldier of the LRA for eight long years. Slowly the army
withered on the vine as the government soldiers forced Kony further
and further into the bush. Moses crossed borders without knowing it.
They were driven out of Uganda and into the Democratic Republic of
Congo. Then they were driven out of the Democratic Republic of Congo
into the Central African Republic. But there were no border posts. No
customs posts. No duty free shops. Only a million square miles of
forest and nothing. When they found a village, they killed and looted
and raped and abducted. But most of the time they just ran. Day after
day. Week after week. Always with a gnawing hunger. Always with their
pursuers snapping at their heels.
By
2012 Kony's name was suddenly playing large on the social media.
Young people from all over the world signed on the dotted line to
campaign against the most wanted man in the world. President Obama
took note and put a $5 million bounty on Kony's head. A team of 100
Green Berets was dispatched to the heart of Africa to advise on the
hunt and to offer logistical support.
Every
jungle firefight was defensive. Every jungle firefight was lost. By
2013 the LRA was little more than a semi starved rabble.
The
best goat herder in Obongi had been waiting for many months for the
right moment to arrive. The moment came in March 2013 when the older
soldiers were passed out drunk on looted palm wine.
Moses
took his moment and slipped from the camp.
And
he walked. All he knew of the world were snippets he had collected
from other boy soldiers. Some spoke English and he had absorbed some
of their words. In the empty hours of the night, the boys would
sometimes share their dreams of being somewhere else. Somewhere far
away. Many dreamed of home and family. Others who had no home or
family to return to dreamed of distant lands. One boy had spoken of a
land called Scotland where they had the finest cattle a man could
ever find. The boy had proclaimed Scotland to be the greatest land in
the world. And for no reason he could ever understand properly, Moses
Mdumba latched onto the boy's dream and took it for his own.
He
knew Scotland lay far away in the north. He knew how to use the sun
to navigate a route. He knew enough.
He
walked through the Central African Republic and into Chad. He walked
through Chad and into Libya. He crossed the Sahara to the coast of
the Mediterranean sea. He got a place on a dingy and he was pulled
from the water by a Dutch rescue ship.
“But
how did you eat? How did you pay the people traffickers? Where did
you find money?”
“When
I am with Kony I learn how to live from land. And I learn bad things.
When I leave Kony I am not a boy. I am man. Like you see now, yes? I
am big man. Very strong.”
And
suddenly I had a new picture of the Moses who had sneaked from camp
on that dark, dark night. He was a boy only in age. By now he was
already well over six feet tall and no doubt as hard and fit as a
human being can be. For years he had walked for miles every day
through some of the most brutal terrains on earth. He was a veteran
of a hundred firefights. In another parallel life, he might have been
one of the East Africans to win Olympic Gold. Instead, he learned to
survive at any cost. He was the 21st-century version of
the African warrior. No wonder he found his way all the way to Libya
and won himself a place on one of the boats.
And
then? He escaped the camp in Italy and more or less walked all the
way to Calais and the jungle. He found his own corner and lit his own
fire. When three Albanian gangsters stood too close to him, he stood
to his full height and drove them back with the ferocity of his
stare.
The
moment was noticed by three figures who sat around their own fire a
few yards away. One of the figures stood and walked over to Moses.
They looked into each other's eyes and connected. The man held out a
hand and spoke.
“My
name is Omar.”
“I
am Moses.”
“Come.
Join us. We have food.”
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