Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Pop star turned government critic freed on bail in Uganda

- RODNEY MUHUMUZA

KAMPALA, Uganda — Ugandan pop star turned government critic Bobi Wine was freed on bail Monday, ending days of incarcerat­ion.

The 36-year-old lawmaker, whose real name is Kyagulanyi Ssentamu, was on crutches as he left the courthouse in the northern Ugandan town of Gulu. He claims he was injured by severe beatings by security forces while he was in detention.

Ssentamu had been detained since Aug. 14.

A judge freed him alongside others who are similarly charged with treason over their alleged roles in an incident in which President Yoweri Museveni’s motorcade was pelted with stones.

Scores of his supporters outside the courtroom cheered when he came out of the courthouse. They chanted “People power, our power,” a slogan that Ssentamu had popularize­d.

Ssentamu left the courthouse in an ambulance headed for a private hospital in the capital, Kampala.

“We are much stronger and greater in spirit than we were before,” Gerald Karuhanga, one of Ssentamu’s co-accused, told local broadcaste­r NTV after being freed, alleging torture.

Ssentamu was initially charged before a military court with illegal possession of firearms and ammunition. On Thursday those charges were withdrawn and he was immediatel­y re-arrested and charged before a magistrate with the more serious offense of treason.

Ssentamu’s arrest came after he was campaignin­g on Aug. 13 in an election to choose a lawmaker in the northweste­rn town of Arua.

Museveni also was in Arua at the time, campaignin­g for a rival candidate who eventually lost.

While the president was departing, authoritie­s said, his motorcade was pelted with stones by people believed to be supporters of Ssentamu and the candidate he backed, Kassiano Wadri.

Ssentamu’s driver was shot and killed that evening, allegedly by security forces.

Authoritie­s have been under pressure to free Ssentamu, who is challengin­g the long rule of Museveni by appealing to young people who despair over the lack of jobs and other opportunit­ies. His supporters, citing his success in helping opposition candidates to win elections across the country, are urging him to run for president in 2021.

The treason case could drag on for months and maybe even years, potentiall­y crippling Ssentamu’s efforts as an anti-government activist.

A trial date has not yet been fixed for the treason charges. Ssentamu and his co-accused will still be required to appear before a magistrate’s court on Aug. 30. At some point the magistrate, having considered the evidence, will then decide if the case should be committed to the High Court for trial.

The government denies the allegation­s of torture.

Museveni, a U.S. ally on regional security, took power by force in 1986 and has since been elected five times. Although he has campaigned on his record of establishi­ng peace and stability, some worry that those gains are being eroded the longer he stays in power.

The 74-year-old Museveni is now able to seek re-election in 2021 because parliament passed legislatio­n last year removing a clause in the constituti­on that had prevented anyone over 75 from holding the presidency. Ssentamu publicly opposed that decision.

 ?? AP file photo ?? Kyagulanyi Ssentamu (center), a Ugandan pop star known as Bobi Wine, celebrates in Kampala, last year after being sworn in as a member of parliament.
AP file photo Kyagulanyi Ssentamu (center), a Ugandan pop star known as Bobi Wine, celebrates in Kampala, last year after being sworn in as a member of parliament.

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