In February 2004 BBC correspondent Andrew Harding travelled to Lira in Northern Uganda after a massacre in the area of 200 people by rebels. In the middle of a peace rally marching through town a skinny boy grabbed his hand and through his sobs told of how his family had been killed by the LRA (Lord's Resistance Army rebel group).
Both his parents, his brother and his sister had been massacred and he was lost. Andrew called a local orphanage run by a Dutch woman called Jozina whose colleague collected Innocent the same evening and took him away on her bicycle to his new home. A few weeks later the East Africa correspondent visited the Dutch-run orphanage 'The House of Grace' just outside the town of Lira in Uganda and watched while 20 children said their prayers before eating a breakfast of porridge. Innocent was well looked after and attending a nearby school.
At the end of June 2006 Andrew Harding followed the progress of Innocent and found that there were now 93 more children to look after.