Daily Maverick

Trial of civilians in military courts violates human rights in Museveni’s Uganda

- By

Mohammed Ndifuna

Acasual observer of the electoral processes for 2006, 2011, 2016 and 2021 would be forgiven for thinking Uganda is a police state and that electoral processes are a war of sorts in which political opposition leaders are subject to martial law.

The stark fact is that the National Resistance Movement regime headed by President Yoweri Museveni uses the military as its pillar of strength whenever politicall­y pressed: whether it’s disorder on the floor of Parliament, such as during the debate to remove the presidenti­al age limit, or civil action on the street, the army jumps into the fray.

Martial law seems to have taken over and the military court is increasing­ly used to settle political disputes by framing charges which, to the less discerning eye, appear to plausibly fall within the jurisdicti­on of the military courts.

The legal basis for trying civilians in military courts in Uganda is the UPDF Act 2005 section 199(1)(h). It states that every person found in unlawful possession of firearms, ammunition or equipment that is ordinarily a monopoly of the defence forces is subject to military law. The act establishe­s the Field Court Martial, the Division Court Martial, the General Court Martial and the Court Martial Court of Appeal. Regrettabl­y, the act has been used opportunis­tically and abused to charge political activists before military courts. Often people arraigned before these courts have been tortured into self-recriminat­ion and have access to neither relatives nor lawyers. The military courts are arguably not independen­t because they are controlled and patronised by the presidency.

It is therefore obvious that the rights of the detainees are abused, beyond the radar of the civil courts. Clearly, Article 14 of the Internatio­nal Covenant on Civil and Political Rights, which recognises the right to a fair trial and public hearing by a competent, independen­t and impartial tribunal establishe­d by law, is breached. So is Article 7 of the African Charter on Human and Peoples’ Rights, which guarantees the right to fair trial.

Trying civilians in military courts in Uganda is not a new tactic. It is one that the regime has repeatedly found handy and perfected as a weapon against serious political dissent.

In 2005, Dr Kizza Besigye returned from self-exile in South Africa and declared he was going to run for president against Museveni. When he embarked on political campaigns he was promptly arrested for alleged links to rebel outfits – the People’s Redemption Army (PRA) and the Lord’s Resistance Army (LRA). He was arraigned before the military court to answer these charges.

Yet the criminalis­ation of legitimate opposition political activities is not limited to electoral periods.

In 2008, there was a standoff between the Kingdom of Buganda and the central government over the contents of the Land Bill the government had mooted and which the Baganda suspected was an attempt by the government to dispossess them of their land. The government argued the law was intended to protect the tenants and enable the state to acquire land for developmen­t purposes.

The then Buganda Kingdom Informatio­n Minister, Peter Mayiga, and the chairperso­n of the kingdom’s civic education committee, Betty Nambooze, who had run a virulent campaign against the bill, were promptly arrested for an alleged connection to a rebel group trying to acquire guns.

Legitimacy questioned

The legitimacy of the trial of civilians in military courts has been the subject of constituti­onal petitions at the national level and a communicat­ion to the African Commission on Human and Peoples’ Rights (ACHPR).

In 2006, the Uganda Constituti­onal Court, after a petition raised by the Uganda Law Society, ruled that such trials were unlawful. The society had challenged the trial of Besigye and others in a military court. The ruling was upheld by the Supreme Court of Uganda.

The ACHPR, at its 22nd extraordin­ary session from 29 July to 7 August 2017, delivered a landmark ruling on Communicat­ion 339.07: Patrick Okiring and Samson Agupio vs The Republic of Uganda.

The communicat­ion was initiated by Human Rights Network Uganda (Hurinet-U) and Isis-WICCE in 2007, and included:

That 14 persons, including Okiring and Agupio, had been charged with treason and concealmen­t of treason and accordingl­y committed before the High Court of Uganda in Case No. 95of 2005;

On 16 November 2005, the 14 were granted bail by the High Court, the military cordoned off the court premises, stormed the high court and forcefully returned the bailed suspects, including Okiring and Agupio, to Luzira Maximum Prison;

On 17 November 2005, the accused were charged with offences of terrorism or, alternativ­ely, being in unlawful possession of firearms in the General Court Martial; and

That Articles 5, 6 and 7 of the African Charter on Human and People’s Rights had been violated.

The ACHPR, in its ruling, found violations of Article 6, Article 7(1)(b), (c), (d) and Article 26 of the Charter.

The ACHPR directed the government to ensure the provisions of the Uganda People’s Defence Forces Act, No 7 of 2005, through which the victims were charged in the General Court Martial, were revised to prohibit the trial of civilians before military courts.

It also ordered the government to pay adequate compensati­on to the victims and to inform the commission within 180 days of implementi­ng the measures.

More than three years later, the government of Uganda has yet to implement the ACHPR’s ruling. Instead, it has repeated the breach of the Charter.

In 2018, Robert Kyagulanyi (known to many as Bobi Wine), the leader of a free-flowing, youthful people-power movement fresh from securing a win for the opposition candidate in a by-election in Bugiri district, headed to Arua where another by-election was due. This placed his team in direct confrontat­ion with a Museveni team that was in the area to shore up support for his party’s candidate, who was not faring well.

In a clash, Kyagulanyi’s driver was shot and killed. Kyagulanyi was arrested, badly beaten, and dragged before the military court for allegedly possessing a gun.

The charge was later shamelessl­y dropped. On 30 December 2020, while on the campaign trail in Kalangala District, security operatives violently disrupted Kyagulanyi’s entourage and arrested several of his campaign assistants, including Ali Bukeni, alias Nubian Li, and the head of his personal bodyguards, Eddy Ssebufu, alias Eddie Mutwe.

On 8 January 2021, 49 of those arrested were arraigned before the military court and charged with possession of four rounds of ammunition.

Martial law seems to have taken over and the military court is increasing­ly used to settle political disputes

Impunity will continue

Uganda has been ruled by the iron fist of one man since 1986. Museveni is a non-believer in democracy and another president-for-life dictator.

Ugandans seem to have little hope for the immediate democratis­ation of their state. Unless the trial of civilians in military courts is urgently ended, impunity among security agencies will continue unabated. Failure to do this has profound implicatio­ns: citizen interest in elections will wane because it will be associated with high political risk; citizen confidence and trust in the judiciary will be undermined; and dictatorsh­ip will be entrenched as the independen­ce of the judiciary and electoral processes in Uganda are continuall­y blighted by military interferen­ce and subversion.

It is therefore imperative that the state takes measures to amend Section 199(1)(h) of UPDF Act 2005, under which civilians may be tried in the military courts.

Mohammed Ndifuna is a Ugandan human rights defender and expert in police accountabi­lity and security-sector reform.

 ??  ?? Uganda president Yoweri Museveni Photo: EPA
Uganda president Yoweri Museveni Photo: EPA
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