Business Day

Pop star MP out on bail told not to start protests

- Elias Biryabarem­a Kampala

Bobi Wine, a Ugandan pop star and opposition MP who is seeking to challenge veteran leader Yoweri Museveni for the presidency, was freed on bail on Thursday after spending two days in jail on charges of staging unlawful protests.

Magistrate Esther Nahirya granted bail after hearing Wine’s applicatio­n, but told him he would be returned to jail if he engaged in unlawful demonstrat­ions while free.

Wine, real name Robert Kyagulanyi, has rattled authoritie­s with a fast-growing base of supporters who are electrifie­d by his combinatio­n of music and biting criticism of Museveni.

He was jailed after being charged with several offences stemming from championin­g a demonstrat­ion against taxes on social media usage in 2018.

Wine told the court after submission­s by his attorneys that the charges against him are politicall­y motivated and that he is being persecuted “under the guise of prosecutio­n”.

“My business is standing for the truth, my business is standing for what is morally right,” he said via a video link to the court from a jail south of Kampala.

On the day he was jailed police used teargas to disperse groups of youths in various parts of Kampala who were demonstrat­ing against the government and what they see as harassment of Wine for his political ambitions.

Museveni, 74 and in power since 1986, is expected to stand in the next presidenti­al election in 2021. The opposition and some rights activists say the president has grown authoritar­ian, citing frequent teargassin­g of opposition rallies, jailing of activists and harassment of independen­t media.

On Wednesday, state media regulator the Uganda Communicat­ions Commission ordered the suspension of several staff at 13 media outlets.

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