Houston Chronicle

Ugandan forces surround candidate’s home

- By Abdi Latif Dahir

NAIROBI, Kenya — Ugandan security forces Friday surrounded and then breached the compound of Bobi Wine, the country’s leading opposition candidate, a day after a contentiou­s general election that he said was marred by widespread “fraud and violence.”

The breach, reported by Wine and confirmed by several people involved in his campaign, took place as the country’s electoral commission released partial results of the general election that showed the incumbent president, Yoweri Museveni, in the lead. Wine’s lawyer said the siege effectivel­y constitute­d house arrest.

Wine, 38, was the most potent challenger to Museveni, a 76-yearold who has ruled the country for 35 years. The tense election campaign was marked by a crackdown on opposition figures such as Wine and others, which sparked nationwide protests that were put down by police and resulted in the killing of more than 50 people. An internet shutdown that started just before Election Day is still in place.

With ballots from almost half of the country’s polling stations counted, preliminar­y results show Museveni with more than 62 percent of the vote and Wine with 29 percent, according to the country’s electoral commission.

On Friday afternoon, Wine said that forces with the Ugandan military along with plaincloth­es officers carrying guns broke into his compound in the capital, Kampala.

“We are under siege,” Wine, a musician-turned-lawmaker whose real name is Robert Kyagulanyi, said in a post on Twitter. “The military has jumped over the fence and has now taken control of our home.

“None of these military intruders is talking to us,” he added in another tweet. “We are in serious trouble.”

Spokesmen for the government and the Kampala police did not immediatel­y respond to requests for comment.

Bruce Afran, Wine’s lawyer, later said that by surroundin­g his home, the government was placing him “under house arrest.”

“The military are registerin­g anyone who enters his house and inspecting vehicles as they leave to be sure he is not inside and leaving the property,” he said in an interview.

In a news conference earlier Friday at his residence, Wine sounded upbeat about his prospects of winning and cast doubt on the early results.

“We have certainly won this election, and we have won it by far,” Wine said. “The people of Uganda will and must reject the blatant usurpation of their will and their voice.”

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