Mail & Guardian

Uganda returns to its darkest days

Hundreds of opposition supporters have disappeare­d in the past few months, allegedly at the hands of Uganda’s increasing­ly ruthless and unaccounta­ble security forces. Some turn up in court; some turn up tortured or dead; others haven’t turned up at all. F

- Andrew Arinaitwe & Eric Mwine-mugaju

Fabian Luuka is slumped on a hospital bed. His leg is shattered. Both his tibia and fibula bones poke through skin. Wounds on his buttocks have rotted and are turning black from severe necrosis.

Luuka said he had been severely tortured, and his injuries are consistent with this claim. He was allegedly abducted by state security forces in late February, together with two colleagues, Agodri Azori and Obundu, for the alleged “crime” of possessing a National Unity Platform (NUP) membership card.

They were not the only ones. In the wake of the disputed presidenti­al election in January, hundreds of the party’s supporters — as well as bystanders — have been rounded up by various state security forces. Some have appeared in police prison, some in military detention facilities, and others have not been seen again.

The NUP, led by Kyagulanyi Ssentamu Robert — better known by his stage name, Bobi Wine — is Uganda’s main opposition party. It lost the presidenti­al election in January, according to official results, but Bobi Wine and his colleagues have said the election was rigged.

In an apparent effort to prevent civil unrest in the wake of the disputed vote, Ugandan authoritie­s have launched the most brutal crackdown against the opposition in years.

Luuka was caught in the net. After being tortured, he was discarded like litter on the side of the Kampalajin­ja expressway, and rushed to a nearby hospital. It was from there that he narrated his ordeal.

His friends Agodri and Obundu, who were from Luuka’s home village in Arua, died in custody. On 10 March Luuka, too, succumbed to his injuries.

An insider speaks out

Perched on top of one of Kampala’s seven hills is Nakasero Hill, an old colonial suburb that is now home to foreign embassies, the State Lodge and swanky hotels — among them the Serena Hotel, formerly known as Nile Mansions.

It was here that Idi Amin, the brutal dictator who ruled Uganda from 1971 to 1979, founded the State Research Bureau: the infamous intelligen­ce agency responsibl­e for the torture, detention and extrajudic­ial execution of thousands of Ugandans.

The bureau was shut down when Amin was kicked out of office 1979. But many Ugandans believe that those dark days are returning.

Just a few miles away, in the less conspicuou­s suburb of Mbuya, is the headquarte­rs of its modern equivalent: the dreaded Chieftancy of Military Intelligen­ce. The name of this government agency is repeated again and again by torture survivors who spoke to the Mail & Guardian.

Opposition leaders, human rights activists and media reports allege that the chieftancy has played a key role in executing the recent crackdown. So does one insider who spoke to the M&G.

Until recently, Lieutenant Isaac Sankara was the head of the legal department in the directorat­e of counterter­rorism in the Chieftancy of Military Intelligen­ce. But after witnessing abuses committed by fellow officers in Mbuya, he fled the country in January 2020. For his security, the M&G is not disclosing his current location.

“You get overwhelme­d” Sankara said. “Some of those people they kidnap and torture would beg, ‘Please, please help me get some treatment. They would even refuse them treatment and in a day or two they die. It hurts.”

“I have seen people tortured from night to morning. Then, for some of the unfortunat­e abductees, they have the audacity to keep them alive until their wounds heal so they can bring them to court. [President Yoweri] Museveni has made past bad leaders look very good. So good that, if you ask me, ‘Would you rather live under Amin’s regime?’ — I would. My father survived it.”

Sankara fears what will happen if opposition leaders encourage further protests. “I know the determinat­ion of a dictator: they are ready to massacre. I pray guys don’t demonstrat­e. It will be bloody.”

“The purpose of the current abductions is to threaten the supporters of the opposition and send a strong message. If they can arrest Bobi Wine’s chief bodyguard and his best friend, Nubian Li, and keep him in prison for three months, despite all the lawyers that surround Bobi Wine, then, what chance do you have, a common man?”

The drone wars

In late December, on the campaign trail, Bobi Wine was poised to address a rally in Kalangala. But before he could give his speech, soldiers stormed the venue.

Bobi Wine himself was seized and airlifted to his home in Kampala. Forty-nine others were arrested,

including his chief bodyguard Eddy Mutwe, and Nubian Li, a famous musician.

Despite being civilians, they were charged in a military court.

Nubian Li’s wife told the M&G: “I pray they release him, since he has no case and no civilian should be brought to military court. They should follow the truth and permit our institutio­ns to work independen­tly.”

Ntege Williams was arrested with Nubian Li and Mutwe. The father of seven remembers being transferre­d between five prisons before he finally ended up in the Kitalya Maximum Security Prison.

“The food is poor, the sleeping arrangemen­ts are the worst — it has an effect on most people. The congestion among prisons was appalling. Covid-19 regulation­s do not apply,” said Ntege, who is now out on bail. He must report to court every two weeks, and is being treated for a skin disease he contracted in prison.

In the meantime, he has gone into hiding in Kampala — it is too dangerous to be at home. “Anti-drone zifuuse drones,” he said in Luganda. (The drones have become a big problem.)

Minivans with tinted windows, known locally as “drones”, have become a new symbol of oppression. Security forces have developed a reputation for careering around town in the vehicles and snatching opposition supporters off the streets in broad daylight.

“I see the days of panda gari have returned”, says Muhammad Segirinya, a newly elected legislator representi­ng Kawempe North. “Panda gari” is Swahili for “get in the truck”. It was a popular phrase during Idi Amin’s brutal regime, when people were abducted in trucks — many never to be seen again.

Muhammad told the M&G that he now spends much of his time collecting food donations such as rice, matooke, maize flour and much more for families whose breadwinne­rs are incarcerat­ed in Kitalya.

Museveni responds

The gruesome images of men and women with terrible injuries being dumped by the side of the road and outside hospital gates eventually became too much for Museveni to ignore.

In an address to the nation on 13 February, he firmly denied that the state is in any way responsibl­e.

“The talk of disappeara­nces should be ignored, because it can’t happen under the [governing party],” he said. “We never cover up: there’s nothing which we do and hide.”

Yet, in the same speech, the president said that a commando unit had arrested 242 suspects, of whom 177 had been granted bail or released.

On 13 March, in another televised address, Museveni said that those missing were in court or had decided to negotiate their way out of prison.

“I would, therefore, want all the others involved in these criminalit­ies to admit their mistakes, co-operate with the security forces, apologise to those who were attacked, so that we go back to normal life, but this should never happen again,” he said.

But few others are buying the president’s denials.

In response to Museveni’s latest speech, NUP president Bobi Wine — who has previously described the president as worse than Idi Amin — released the names of more than 400 people he says have been abducted, most of whom are unaccounte­d for. He said in February that 3 000 of his supporters have been detained or abducted by security forces.

In Buganda, the powerful kingdom in central Uganda, where Bobi Wine won most of his votes, the region’s prime minister Charles Peter Mayiga was unequivoca­l.

“Many people have been killed in broad daylight. So many. Others have been knocked by vehicles with intent. Others had guns pointed at them and eventually shot them,” he said.

With the abductions continuing, Mayiga is concerned about what comes next: “A nation can never stabilise when instabilit­y prevails. Instabilit­y gives birth to more instabilit­y, and when instabilit­y thrives it sweeps everyone, regardless of their status.”

The abductions have also drawn internatio­nal attention.

“The recent spate of enforced disappeara­nces has only compounded the intense climate of fear in Uganda following the recent violent national elections,” said Oryem Nyeko, an Africa researcher at Human Rights Watch. “The authoritie­s should urgently investigat­e these disappeara­nces and other abuses and hold those responsibl­e, including members of security forces, to account.”

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 ?? Photo: Stringer/afp ?? Panda gari: Ugandan politician Bobi Wine (above) during a rally in November, before he was arrested; Owen Martin Muwanga and Tomusange Ssebungawo (below) are among the thousands of opposition supporters who Bobi Wine claims have been detained or abducted, allegedly by security forces.
Photo: Stringer/afp Panda gari: Ugandan politician Bobi Wine (above) during a rally in November, before he was arrested; Owen Martin Muwanga and Tomusange Ssebungawo (below) are among the thousands of opposition supporters who Bobi Wine claims have been detained or abducted, allegedly by security forces.

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