Deutsche Welle (English edition)

Uganda: Court orders end to Bobi Wine's house arrest

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Bobi Wine's house arrest has been deemned unlawful by a Ugandan judge. It remains to be seen whether the military will oblige by the court order.

A Ugandan judge ruled on Monday that the country's security forces may not continue to keep the presidenti­al challenger Bobi Wine under de facto house arrest.

The 38- year- old singerturn­ed- politician who ran against President Yoweri Museveni in the recent presidenti­al election has been barred from leaving his house without a military escort since January 24.

Justice Michael Elubu ruled in favor of Wine's lawyers who had requested his release: "The continued indefinite restrictio­n and confinemen­t of the applicant to his home is unlawful and his right to liberty has been infringed."

"Having found that the restrictio­ns are unlawful it is hereby ordered that they are lifted," Elubu said.

The judge declared Wine's home was not a proper deten

tion facility and said that authoritie­s must bring criminal charges against him if he threatens public order.

Ugandan authoritie­s had said Wine could only leave his Kampala residence with a military escort, fearing that his presence would incite riots.

No response yet from the military

The court's decision was welcomed by Wine's associates — however, Ugandan authoritie­s have a history of ignoring similar court orders.

"The judge ordered that the state and its agencies should immediatel­y vacate his property and his right to personal liberty should immediatel­y be reinstated," lawyer George Musisi told Reuters.

According to the official results, Museveni won the election with 58% of the vote against Wine's 34%.

Wine rejected the result claiming that he in fact won and said he had evidence of the military stuffing ballot boxes and accused Museveni of staging a "coup."

The former rapper said on Friday that he may not challenge the results of the election in court because a loss there would confirm Museveni's win.

Museveni, who has been in power since 1986, denied the allegation­s of electoral fraud and called the poll "the most cheating-free" since the country's independen­ce.

The country was rocked by violence in the run-up to the presidenti­al election, leading observers to question the fairness of the results.

 ??  ?? Ugandan presidenti­al challenger Bobi Wine has rejected the official results of the election
Ugandan presidenti­al challenger Bobi Wine has rejected the official results of the election

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