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KONY 2012

KONY 2012 is a film and campaign by Invisible Children that aims to make Joseph Kony famous, not to celebrate him, but to raise support for his arrest and set a precedent for international justice.

Watch this Online World Premiere KONY 2012 & share with all your friends online! Let’s use social action to stop the end of child soldiers in 2012!

So who is Joesph Kony?

Well, for those of you without Facebook (and I believe there are some people!) the story in a nutshell is this:

A campaign to bring accused war criminal Joseph Kony, the fugitive head of Uganda’s Lord’s Resistance Army rebels, to justice has gone viral on the internet.

The campaign was launched by the non-profit group Invisible Children with an emotional 30-minute video which has been viewed over 30 million times on YouTube and attracted more than 300,000 comments within 48 hours of launching.

A number of celebrities have joined the campaign by tweeting links to the video and promoting the cause.

“Dear Joseph Kony, I’m Gonna help Make you FAMOUS ! We will stop YOU #StopKONY ! All 6,OOO,OOO of my followers RT NOW Pls!” hip-hop icon and fashion mogul Sean “Diddy” Combs said on his Twitter feed @iamdiddy.

“#KONY2012,” tweeted singer Rihanna on her @rihanna account.

“Whoa! we need to #STOPKONY,” said actress Zooey Deschanel on @ZooeyDeschanel.

Yes, Joseph Kony has made some powerful enemies in Diddy, Ri-Ri and the New Girl.

Born in 1988 from the frustrations against the government of Uganda’s marginalised Acholi ethnic group, the LRA has since dropped its national political agenda for the narrow objective of pillage and plunder.

Kony, whose movement draws on Messianic beliefs and a smattering of Christian motifs, is wanted by the International Criminal Court.

The LRA rebels currently number several hundred, a fraction of their strength at their peak but still include a core of hardened fighters infamous for mutilating civilians and abducting children to act as soldiers and sex-slaves.

US President Barack Obama in October announced he was sending 100 special forces soldiers to Kampala to help Uganda track down Kony, and in December it emerged US special forces had set up a base in the Central African Republic as part of their regional effort to hunt the LRA.

The Stop Kony campaign by Invisible Children has not been without controversy.

The non-profit has come in for criticism for channelling a majority of their raised funds — some 70 per cent or more according to some accounts — to salaries, travel expenses and filmmaking, with charity watchdog Charity Navigator giving the group a low two-star rating for lack of financial accountability.

Some commentators have also questioned Invisible Children’s support for the ethically questionable Ugandan armed forces as well as their push for a military response that may end up costing even more children’s lives.

HOW TO HELP:
Visit: http://kony2012.com
Donate to Invisible Children: https://stayclassy.org/checkout/set-donation?eid=14711
For info on Invisible Children: http://invisiblechildren.com