Monday, 31 October 2011


Police arrest and whisk Kizza Besigye to unknown place

SOURCE: T

Besigye

Detectives commanded by Kira Road DPC James Akiiki Ruhweza intercepted the politician at a check a few metres outside his home shortly after 8am.
Dr Besigye had just started a trek to work in defiance of police order when he was arrested together with two of his aides. Our Reporter John Njoroge says Besigye was given three options; to return to his house, drive out to work in his car or be arrested. “You can arrest me if you want,” Mr Njoroge quotes Besigye as telling police.
Officers immediately bundled him into a waiting police van and he was whisked to Kasangati Police station. Journalists following the developments were barred from accessing the station. Shortly afterward, the van raced out on the Kasangati-Kyanja-Ntinda route and vanished from sight of journalists in Ntinda trading centre, a city suburb.
Our reporter says he has checked Kira Police Station, the Naguru-based Special Investigations Unit offices and Rapid Response Unit command centre in Kireka as well as Criminal Investigations Directorate (CID) Kibuli headquarters and there is no word at all the places about the trio’s whereabouts.
The Forum for Democratic Change party leader was until last week confined to his house by police under what the Force called ‘preventive arrest’.
A magistrate ruled that the confinement was unconstitutional since Dr Besigye’s home is not a gazzetted detention centre as stipulated in the laws, and restraining him for more than 48 hours without being arraigned in court violated his rights to fair treatment under the Constitution.
Dr Besigye had told journalists at a press conference on Friday that he will continue walking to work whether the Activists-for-Change engineered protest trek is in place or not because “it is my right to walk”

Treason charge suspects remanded

Wednesday, 19 October 2011


Shocking:8 Million Ugandans Sleep Hungry

SOURCE: 256NEWS.COM, 19 OCTOBER 2011

Shocking:8 Million Ugandans Sleep Hungry

About 8 million Ugandans go to bed hungry. This is due to increased food prices, Professor Barnabus Kiiza of Makerere University has said.
According to Kiiza, this situation is a big threat to the economy’s growth and development to eradicate poverty and the attainment of the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs).
He said most of the affected people are in urban areas where food is shopped in markets.
Kiiza advised government to focus on setting up Agro processing industries in order to employ the urban poor.
UN last week warned that food prices are likely to become more volatile in coming years, increasing the risk that more poor people in import-dependent countries will go hungry, the United Nations said in an annual report on food insecurity published on Monday.
Three A4C members charged with treason
SOURCE: THE NEW VISION, 19 OCTOBER 2011
 
clip
Police clash with walk-to-work supporters earlier this year

NAKAWA, Magistrates Court –Three members of the Activists for Change (A4C) pressure group have been charged with treason following a recent reawakening of the walk-to-work campaign.
The three, Sam Mugumya, Mwijukye Francis and Ingrid Turinawe, are among several other loyalists of the group said to have contrived a plot to throw the government out of power between August and October of 2011.
Turinawe, the A4C leader, did not appear for the trial, which started Wednesday morning in Nakawa, prompting the court to issue a warrant of arrest for her.
Mugumya and Mwijukye were present but court did not allow them to take a plea due to jurisdiction.
The trio, together with other individuals, allegedly executed their plot in Kampala, Mityana, Hoima, Wakiso and other districts.
They mobilized the launching of simultaneous riots across the country until the government would be overthrown.
Joseph Bayiga, the state prosecutor in the case, affirmed that investigations are to continue.

Kayihura on spot over claims to overthrow govt

SOURCE: THE DAILY MONITOR, 19 OCTOBER 2011

Kayihura on spot over claims to overthrow govt
Kayihura at the press conference where he claimed treason charges would be preferred against the arrested walk to work demonstrators.  

Police chief Kale Kayihura yesterday accused FDC Women’s League chairperson Ingrid Turinawe of plotting to overthrow the government, and announced 15 opposition activists taken into custody on Sunday for attending a meeting she addressed in Kampala, face treason charges.

But Ms Turinawe, who spoke to this newspaper by telephone, last night, said Maj. Gen. Kayihura is a “liar” who has failed in his attempts to link pressure group Activists 4 Change, organisers of the revived walk-to-work demonstrations, to terrorism.

“He has sold a lot of lies to Ugandans,” said Ms Turinawe, “He should be ignored. What he is struggling to achieve is to intimidate opposition activists and find ways of detaining us for a longer time.” The FDC leader said she was not in hiding and dared police to adduce incriminating evidence to justify plots to arrest her.
The police chief had said A4C has hoodwinked the public into believing the walk protest over soaring cost of living, which resumed on Monday, is an “innocent” civil disobedience, yet their motivation is to stir anarchy.

He said: “It is a deliberate and well-planned plot to overthrow the government. The public should be aware that any act done in furtherance of any such plot is also deemed treason.”
Police last evening circulated to media houses copies of an audio recording that Gen. Kayihura earlier in the day told journalists contained treasonable utterances Ms Turinawe allegedly made in her Sunday address to opposition youth, code-named ‘commanders’, at the Inter-party Cooperation (IPC) offices on Katonga Road in Kampala.

We could not independently verify authenticity of the audio, and a police detective told us in confidence last night that Ms Turinawe’s statements being circulated was recorded on September 23, and not three days ago as the IGP said.

That notwithstanding, Gen. Kayihura said: “The 15 (opposition activists in police detention) are going to be charged with treason. We have submitted their files to the Director of Public Prosecutions for advice.”
Legal minds yesterday faulted the charges as “unsustainable” since, according to human rights lawyer, Mr Ladislaus Rwakafuzi, the law envisages treason as the plot to or change of government by force of arms, not words. “Kayihura is a political commissar for the ruling NRM party but should not, as head of police which is a civil force, be a politician,” he said.

Amnesty International’s Godfrey Odongo urged government “must unequivocally move to allow peaceful demonstrations and police role should be to regulate, not block the assemblies by using excessive force”.
“If that right has to be limited,” he said, “it must be for a specific and justifiable purpose not the broad reason that the demonstrations will turn violent. That amounts to government intent to ban peaceful assemblies.”
Article 29 of the (amended) 1995 Constitution provides for freedom of assembly and peaceful demonstration, and limitations imposed under Article 43 that police often cite as the basis of their intervention to forestall infringement of other people’s rights, requires such restrictions should be “acceptable and demonstrably justifiable in a free and democratic society”.

The police insistence to permit when and where individuals should hold rallies instead of regulating the processions by offering security is unconstitutional, argued Mr Odongo.
The Uganda Peoples Congress last evening weighed in support of the walk-to-work demonstrations over an economy the party said was in “shambles” and denounced Gen. Kayihura’s claims of treason charges against the opposition activists as “arbitrary, hollow and treasonous”.
“The IGP’s announcement fits well in President Museveni’s mischievous plan to deny bail to his political opponents in order to extract submission from Ugandans,” read UPC deputy Spokesman Moses Nuwagaba’s statement. “This explains the change of tactic by the IGP to, this time; use a hammer to kill a mosquito.”

At the height of first phase of the walk protest in May, which put the nation on tenterhooks, and clashes between demonstrators and security forces resulted in 10 deaths, mostly from gunshot wounds, President Museveni proposed that the Constitution be amended to deny suspected economic saboteurs and rioters, among other offenders, bail until they serve at least six months on remand.

Tuesday, 18 October 2011

Walk to work mpeg2video

FDC in financial crisis, blames government


Besigye Arrested, Released In W2W

SOURCE: THE RED PEPPER, 18 OCTOBER 2011
Besigye was intercepted by police on Tuesday around Kasangati hospital on his way to town. He explains that police told him he was a suspect and ordered him to seat in a waiting police car.
According to Besigye he was bundled on a waiting police car with his aides Moses Byamugisha and Martin Ndyomugenyi and taken to Kasangati police station.
He explains that at Kasangati police station the cops told him they were going to charge him but explain to him the charges.
He says that cops kept pacing up and down while talking on phone. Minutes later, the cops asked Besigye to board a police car and drove him to his home.
Addressing journalists shortly after, Besigye vowed to walk again saying that Police had not given him any instructions.
A few minutes later Ndyomugenyi returned bleeding with several bruises on his body he sustained after being tortured by the cops.
His colleague Moses Byamugisha is still being held by Police. Meanwhile in Kasangati trading center police was engaged in running battles with residents. Police used water cannons to disperse residents who had blocked the road using huge stones, and tree trunks.
Besigye trys to elude Police by taking to the plantations on Tuesday
Besigye supporters look-on as he takes the stride.
The Colonel's stride

Walk to work: 15 A4C members facing treason charges

SOURCE : THE DAILY MONITOR, 18 OCTOBER 2011

Walk to work: 15 A4C members facing treason charges
IGP Kayihura at the media centre where he announced that 15 A4C members face treason charges.  

At least 15 members of Activists for Change (A4C) arrested during the weekend maybe facing death after the police preferred charges of treason, the police chief, Maj. Gen. Kale Kayihura said at the Media Centre.
The 15 A4C members were arrested in different areas including the IPC offices at Katonga Road in Kampala and they are detained at different police stations in Kampala. Treason is punishable by death on conviction.
Gen. Kayihura said they are hunting for Ingrid Turinawe, a Forum for Democratic Change woman leader, on the same charges for making remarks to some A4C members to overthrow the government in the Sunday meeting.
“We have a recording of her. It is a deliberate and well planned plot to overthrow the government. And today we share proof of this with the public. The public should be aware that any act done in furtherance of any such plot is also deemed treason,” Gen. Kayihura said.
The police say that the recording will be availed to the press shortly.
Since April this year, A4C a pressure group protesting the high cost of living has been engaged in walk to work campaign which has led to running battles with security officers.

Protesters unleash bees on anti-riot police officers

SOURCE: THE DAILY MONITOR, 18 OCTOBER 2011
Police warned last night of stern action against whoever was responsible for a “bees attack” against its personnel in Rukungiri District where business was paralysed amid heavy security deployment in the crackdown on renewed walk-to-work protests.
Two unidentified protesters shocked police when they approached a patrol pick-up on Republic Street and smashed two pot-fulls of bees at them. The insects went wild, stinging the officers as protesters gathered.
The police officers, who were patrolling the street at about 11am, fled the scene as onlookers also scampered for safety. Scores of passengers were left stranded as the bus park remained closed. Boda boda and special hire stages were also deserted. Rukungiri District Police Commander Julius Selube described the bee attack as a dangerous tactic. He promised action against the suspects.
Rukungiri, the home district of opposition leader Kizza Besigye, remained tense as protests against the rising cost of living, amid perceptions of widespread State corruption, got off to measured start.
Thirteen arrested
At least 13 people, some of them area leaders of opposition parties, were confirmed as having been arrested or confined to their homes by security forces in the region.
About 20 people had started walking to work from Ntungamo’s Centenary Bank area moving towards FDC office but police intercepted them at Ntungamo Secondary School.In Ntungamo District, police fired in the air to disperse peaceful demonstrators. The District Police Commander, Mr Francis Kabera, said six people were arrested for allegedly disrupting business and inciting businesspersons to join them.
Those who were in police custody in Ntungamo by press time include Ms Alice Kafoda, the FDC chairperson for Women League, Mr Denis Mugizi the municipality FDC chairperson, Mr Benon Nuwagira, a businessman, Mr Aloysious Twine, the FDC administrative secretary, Mr Justus Muhwezi and Julius Sunday, a businessman.
Four other suspected demonstrators were arrested by Bushenyi police. All those arrested had not appeared in court by press time.
In Mbarara, DP vice president for western region Imam Issa Makumbi and three others were still in police custody by press time. Regional police spokesperson Polly Namaye said the Force was still consulting on charges to prefer against the suspects.
Policemen, who had camped outside the residences of opposition politicians in Mbarara Town, arrested Imam Makumbi soon after he emerged from his home on Makan Singh Street and attempted to address journalists.
Other politicians who were confined to their homes by a combined force of police and military personnel were FDC’s Stanley Katembeya and Mr Charles Atamba, the party’s district spokesperson.
Elsewhere, heavy security presence was visible on the main roads in all the four districts that make up Kigezi sub-region.

Eight A4C activists arrested

Monday, 17 October 2011

Walk to work protests resume

Activists launch second phase of walk-to-work


DP Boss Caged Over W2W

SOURCE: THE RED PEPPER, 17 OCTOBER 2011
DPC Ngozi Naanyurura arrests Imam Makumbi the DP boss in Mbarara
Imam Makumbi, the Democratic Party vice president for western region has been arrested for participating in the walk to work protests on Monday.
Makumbi was intercepted along Makan Singh Street in Mbarara town on Monday morning as he started his walk to work journey just a few meters away from his home.
Makumbi was arrested at around 9.30am by the Mbarara district police commander Nicklaus Ngonzi, who found him addressing the media along the street on the walk to work protests.
He was immediately driven away to Mbarara central police station in the DPC’s personal car. The police declined to talk to the media over Makumbi’s arrest.
Meanwhile, security remains tight in most parts of south western Uganda following the announcement by Activists for Change on Friday that they were resuming the walk to work protests.
By 5am on Monday morning, all hot spots and homes of prominent opposition leaders had been sealed off according to the regional police publicist, Polly Namaye.
Namaye says they could not sit and wait for the A4C to take advantage of their absence on the road to disrupt people’s businesses and the ongoing UNEB examinations.
Namaye says though they had talked to the organizers of the walk to work over the weekend to give up their plans, police could not take it for granted and had to deploy fully.

Walk to work: Teargas, gunshots rock downtown Kampala

SOURCE: THE DAILY MONITOR, 17 OCTOBER 2011


Walk to work: Teargas, gunshots rock downtown Kampala
A Policeman closing in on a protestor in Kampala on Monday who taking part in the walk to work demonstration. Thirteen people including the organizers of the walk to work demonstration have been arrested and due to be charged in courts of law.
Teargas and gunshots have on Monday morning rocked parts of Kampala City as Police battled to disperse protestors attempting to take part in the Walk to walk demonstrations. Many shops have remained closed in the Central Business District following the disturbances.
Witnesses say the Police action was prompted by protestors who blocked traffic on Kyaggwe Road and Kisekka Market Road while throwing stones at passerby motorists.
By 9.30am, despite the Police assurance that the situation had normalized, shops remained closed in Kisekka Market, at Equotorial Shopping Arcade, and other shops while protestors are still pelting stones to security personnel.
Kampala Metropolitan Police publicist, Ibin Ssenkumbi said the Police presence in the area was prompted by a group of persons who blocked traffic, “We intervened to enable smooth flow of motorists.”
Witnesses at the scene say the Military Police and other security agencies have been heavily deployed and are patrolling the streets amidst taunts from the protestors standing on the closed shops.
“The situation here is tense; people are throwing stones continuously at the security personnel and cars passing. There is a lot of noise and hooting,” said a witness.
The incident come as the planned walk to work protests resume despite Police warning people to desist from participating.
At Kanyanya, Gayaza Road, Police mounted a road block slowing the flow of traffic prompting exchanges between motorists, their passengers and the Police.
Dr Besigye was by 9am addressing an FDC meeting at Rider Hotel, Seeta, Mukono amidst heavy deployment of security operatives around the hotel.

13 arrested as walk protests resume

SOURCE: THE DAILY MONITOR, 17 OCTOBER 2011
KAMPALA
At least 13 members of the pressure group—Activists for Change—were in police custody by press time, as they planned the resumption of the walk-to-work protests today, which police has warned they will crush. President Museveni also yesterday warned that the protests would be stopped, as they would disrupt the Senior Four final examinations that start countrywide today.
“I have heard that some people want to disrupt the national examinations. I want to warn them that they will not disrupt the examinations. We shall not tolerate anybody to disrupt the examinations of the children,” the President told a news conference in Kampala.
Plain clothed security operatives arrested the 13 activists as they attempted to leave the A4C offices on Katonga Road in Kampala. They were taken to an undisclosed location.
The activists had been attending a meeting called by the FDC Secretary for Women, Ms Ingrid Turinawe, who said the meeting was to discuss a letter addressed to the A4C national coordinator, Mr Mathias Mpuuga, by the police, chief, Maj. Gen Kale Kayihura, over the walk-to-work protests scheduled to begin today.
“As our members walked out of the offices, they were rounded up by unknown people who we believe were plain cloth security officers,” Ms Turinawe said. She said 10 A4C members were arrested in the operation and the police later detained three others who went to look for their relatives at Jinja Road Police Sation.
Police spokesperson Judith Nabakooba said those arrested were found with “exhibits in connection to the walk to work”. Some of those arrested include Hassan Kirunda, Allan Mutagubya, Shafik Sebandeka, Martin Mayanja, Ziyadi Muteesa and Mathew Walakira.
An unidentified student of Makerere University who had attended the meeting was also arrested in Wandegeya. The three others who went to Jinja Road Police Station to search for their relatives and were detained are Jenny Lubega, Faridah Nakabugo and Rajab Kaya.
A4C had written to police requesting permission to conduct a week of walking to work that would end in a rally at Kololo Airstrip on Saturday 22.
Gen. Kayihura on Friday wrote back saying the request would not be honoured because police had received petitions against the protests from several interest groups.
Of particular concern, Gen. Kayihura said, were parents and school administrators who have informed him that the national examinations are set to begin today, yet A4C allegedly intends to paralyse public transport. “We are aware that the senior four examinations begin on October 17 which coincides with the start of our walk-to-work week. We are anxious to ensure that they start and complete their exams successfully,” Mr. Mpuuga said in a press release on Saturday.
When Daily Monitor visited the A4C offices yesterday security operatives were lurking at the entrance of the offices. For close to two hours, Ms Turinawe and other activists locked themselves in the building as they made phone calls to other activists to come to their rescue.
Journalists from several media houses flocked the area, prompting the security operatives to leave. Ms Turinawe and other activists later left the offices on foot.