The Guardian (USA)

Bobi Wine protests: death toll rises in Uganda’s worst unrest in years

- Jason Burke Africa correspond­ent and Samuel Okiror in Kampala

At least 19 people have been killed in Uganda over two days in the country’s worst unrest in a decade, as security forces try to quell protests triggered by the arrest of presidenti­al candidate Bobi Wine.

Young people burned tyres and blockaded streets in Uganda’s capital, Kampala, on Thursday, and soldiers fanned out across the city with armoured vehicles, a day after the arrest of Wine, a popular reggae singer who is the leading challenger to President Yoweri Museveni in forthcomin­g elections.

“This is a war-like situation, so the army has to deploy,” Brig Flavia Byekwaso, a military spokespers­on, told Reuters. “You can see what is going on, people are being stoned, people are being killed, vehicles are being vandalised, tyres everywhere. These things are spontaneou­s on all streets, so police cannot handle such a situation.”

Images posted on social media showed police in Kampala firing indiscrimi­nately at people in buildings overlookin­g the protests and unidentifi­able men in plaincloth­es, believed to be security personnel, firing automatic weapons. More than 350 people were arrested, police said.

The exact death toll in the unrest, which spread to other cities during the day, is uncertain. Kampala’s main mortuary reported receiving 19 bodies, with postmortem­s revealing the causes of death as gunshots, suffocatio­n from teargas and injuries sustained by a “hit and run” car accident, the Observer, a local newspaper, reported.

Dr Byarugaba Baterana, the executive director of the Mulago National Referral Hospital in Kampala told reporters that a further nine people who had been admitted at the hospital ward had died of their injuries.

The police reported between seven and 16 deaths.

“We want warn the youths who have been lured into participat­ing in illegal activities to desist from participat­ing in such acts,” said Patrick Onyango, a Kampala police spokesman. “The joint security teams are on top of the situation and will handle anyone who attempts to destabilis­e the capital city.”

Wine, whose real name is Robert Kyagulanyi, was detained on Wednesday while campaignin­g in eastern Uganda after authoritie­s accused the 38-year old of violating anti-coronaviru­s measures by holding mass rallies.

Moments later, spontaneou­s protests erupted in Kampala and several other major towns. Security personnel responded with teargas. A journalist who spoke to Reuters on condition of anonymity said he had seen troops firing automatic rifles.

Byekwaso, the army spokeswoma­n, said squads of both military and police had clashed with protesters in different parts of Kampala. At least two witnesses in the city told Reuters some streets in the city centre were deserted. Schools and universiti­es were reported to have postponed exams scheduled next week following the outbreak of violence.

Wine has been attracting massive crowds and his campaign has rattled the ruling National Resistance Movement (NRM).

Museveni told a rally in Karamoja region that the protesters were “being used by outsiders … homosexual­s and others who don’t like the stability and independen­ce of Uganda. But they will discover what they are looking for. We shall not tolerate confused people. They are playing with fire”.

Earlier this month, Wine was temporaril­y blinded by police when he was arrested moments after being successful­ly certified as a candidate in next year’s election.

Security forces have frequently fired teargas at his rallies and detained and beaten his supporters.

In a statement issued before Wine’s detention on Wednesday, police had warned that presidenti­al candidates would be arrested if they flouted guidelines limiting attendance at rallies to 200 people during the Covid-19 pandemic.

Known by supporters as “the ghetto president”, Wine is one of a new generation of politician­s across Africa who are challengin­g longtime leaders, hoping to harness deep dissatisfa­ction among younger, more educated and often urban voters.

He broke into formal politics in 2017 when he won a seat in Uganda’s national assembly, and has been since been badly assaulted and detained many times.

David Lewis Rubongoya, the secretary general of Wine’s National Unity Platform party, said his arrest was unfair as Museveni and his supporters had been holding mass rallies.

“It’s not about Covid-19. It’s about repression … People are very angry and they are very right to be angry. People are tired of the double standards; they are tired of the oppression and dictatorsh­ip that has caused all these problems in the country,” Rubongoya said. “Museveni is issuing threats. But that will not deter us from our mission. We are determined to liberate this country from the dictator and oppressor. People are tired and fed up.”

Museveni is eligible to seek another term next year after lawmakers removed constituti­onal age limits on the presidency. The former rebel leader’s party insists he remains its most popular member.

Uganda has never witnessed a peaceful transfer of power since independen­ce in 1962.

 ?? Photograph: Badru Katumba/AFP/Getty Images ?? A supporter of Ugandan musician turned politician Robert Kyagulanyi, also known as Bobi Wine, carries his poster as protests continue over his arrest.
Photograph: Badru Katumba/AFP/Getty Images A supporter of Ugandan musician turned politician Robert Kyagulanyi, also known as Bobi Wine, carries his poster as protests continue over his arrest.
 ?? Photograph: Abubaker Lubowa/Reuters ?? Ugandan presidenti­al candidate Bobi Wine is led into a vehicle by riot policemen in Luuka district on 18 November 2020.
Photograph: Abubaker Lubowa/Reuters Ugandan presidenti­al candidate Bobi Wine is led into a vehicle by riot policemen in Luuka district on 18 November 2020.

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