Uganda's Opposition harmed by Museveni's hard tactics

Uganda's Opposition harmed by Museveni's hard tactics

Haya yanatokea Muda Huuu hapa Kampala

Lt. Col. Muhoozi, commander of the Special Forces Group has taken charge of operations in Kiseka Market riots as chaos reigns in the city. People are running away from downtown to the upper areas. The new taxi park has been closed. In the suburbs of Kampala Bwaise , Kalerwe are on fire. The riots are taking an ethnic tone.

Source Hapa
 

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Two dead, over 100 injured in city riots Thursday, 28th April, 2011

One of the injured people being carried away from the rioters

By RONALD SEBUTIKO AND AGNES NANTAMBI

Over 100 people have been admitted at Mulago hospital with injuries they sustained this morning during city riots.

Two people were killed as Police and the army battled rioters in different parts of the city center, according to Uganda Red Cross Society.

One of the the dead is only identified as Ssemugga, a vendor at Channel Street next to St. Balikuddembe market.

Uganda Red Cross secretary general, Micheal Nataka, has told reporters at Mulago that ten sustained live bullet wounds. Others, he added, inhaled too much teargas.

He said one of the injured is a ten-year- old child and pregnant woman identified as Patricia Namugomya.

According to Nataka, today's riot was the most disastrous because most the roads were closed and they could not have access to Mulago hospital.

Meanwhile normalcy has returned to the city although some shops are still closed.

The rioters are protesting the manner in which FDC leader, Kizza Besigye, was arrested and teargased yesterday and the rising cost of living.


KAMPALA PROTESTS: live updates

SHOW OF FORCE: An armoured vehicle manned by the military police patrols downtown Kampala city near Arua Park where security forces are battling demonstrators on Friday. Photo by Isaac Kasamani.
 
duh mwaka huu mpaka kieleweke...mi kwangu besigye namfananisha na Dk Slaa hapa kwetu,mapambano ndo yashaanza hivyo hamna kurudi nyuma.
 
M7 bado ana uchu wa madaraka ya kuwa rais wa EAC ili alete amani katika ukanda huu wa Africa. Viongozi wa nchi jirani bado wanachekelea wanasema hii ndio haki. TO HELL WITH FEDERATION OF EAC, kama ya Kenya na rwanda yalikuwa hayatoshi haya kweli yanaweza kuwaamsha wananchi?
 
Mbona Uganda majina yao yote ya Wakristo? si walijiunga na OIC jumuiya ya nchi za kiislam? au walifanya kwa njaa eti wapate misaada ya waarabu? lakini gaddafi amejenga msikiti ule unoitwa gaddafi.
 
Museveni amezidi kumuonea Basyige, wacha nguvu ya umma iingie kazini.
 
Good timing for the Ugandans maana Museven's God father-Gaddafi naye amebanwa so Gaddafi can not help m7
 
How can we federate politically with such politicians who exercise high form of dictatorship. Can a federation work when one of the partner states does not respect the rule of law?
 
Uganda riots reach capital as anger against President Museveni grows | World news | The Guardian


Riots have swept across the Ugandan capital, Kampala, as protesters called for an Egyptian-style uprising against their autocratic president.

At least two people were killed and more than 100 wounded after soldiers fired live bullets and tear gas and beat demonstrators with sticks. Civilians fought back, blocking roads with burning tyres and pelting vehicles with rocks.
The growing unrest – sparked by rising food and fuel prices – gained fresh impetus after the brutal arrest of opposition leader Kizza Besigye on Thursday.

But President Yoweri Museveni, who was been in control for a quarter of a century, has met the protests with a show of force.
His military police were accused of attacking innocent spectators on Friday. One victim could be seen lying in a pool of blood, apparently after being shot in the head at a local market.

In the Karwerwe neighbourhood, police chased a teenager, Andrew Kibwka, with heavy wooden sticks and rained blows on him.
"I thought the police were going to kill me," he said minutes later, his arm bruised and a finger bleeding. "I was telling them I'm harmless, but they just carried on. I did nothing to provoke them. They beat me because I was running away."
The 18-year-old added: "I'm in pain all over my body. The police are being too brutal. I think Uganda will get worse if the president does not resign."

A minibus, a taxi and other vehicles that tried to travel up the street were pelted with stones. Then soldiers in armoured vehicles appeared and fired tear gas to disperse the crowd, and people ran away in panic.
Standing at a market, Robert Mayanja, who described himself as an activist, said: "What they are doing now shows that Museveni rigged the last election.

"If you look at Uganda, why should we vote for him after 25 years? We have high prices, we have hospitals without medicine. Is there anything to vote for?"
Mayanja, 31, said a repeat of the revolts in Egypt and Tunisia was "definitely" possible. "What we are seeing here are people who are not armed but are taking a stand against armed forces," he added. "People are ready. It's just a question of time.
"We know they are going to arrest many people and put them in torture chambers. We know this regime has expired. These are the signs."

Eric Mbiro, a 20-year-old student, agreed: "We are tired of this government because of the price of commodities," he said. "There is no presidency in Uganda. The president rules the country like his own home. He is a dictator. We need change."
But he was more sceptical about the prospects for an uprising, saying: "We will not manage to do what they did in Egypt because people here are poor. There is too much poverty in Uganda."

Military police fired live rounds, rubber bullets and tear gas at numerous burning barricades blocking the main road out of Kampala to the international airport in Entebbe and sprayed adjacent residential areas with bullets.
Shell casings littered the main road, tear gas hung in the air and security forces beat local residents.

In Ntinda, angry youths shouted and hurled stones and chunks of concrete at passing cars. On one corner, a man ran up to a council vehicle as it drove by and smashed the driver's window with a rock, raising cheers from onlookers.
A coded sign language is already in place. Motorists who hold two fingers aloft in a "v for victory" symbol, showing they support the rebellion, are allowed to pass unharmed, but a single raised thumb is interpreted as a pro-Museveni gesture.
Roads were blocked by rocks, cones, debris and burning tyres. A bare-chested man lay face down on the grass, his head being bandaged by Red Cross medics.

An eyewitness said the man had been the victim of an unprovoked attack. "The military police were making people clear the road, and this boy worked for 30 minutes," Timothy Ssenfuma, a 35-year-old electrical engineer, said. "He said he wanted to go, but they beat him on the head and back until he collapsed. They were also beating up even women and young ladies just to clear the road.

"They are killing innocent Ugandans who are not even involved in the uprising. We appeal to the rest of the world to help Ugandans as they have in Libya and elsewhere."
A teacher, who gave his name only as Nixon, claimed the security forces had launched an indiscriminate attack, saying: "The military police came and started beating up people.
"Some had to run away and others had to fight back to defend their friends. People have terrible anger at the way they were treated."

The 32-year-old said he could not imagine an Egypt-like revolt in the short term. "But in the long term, I believe it can happen," he added. "The military is still strong and many of the soldiers are unwilling to turn to the side of the people. But, in time, they might get tired of beating the people.
"I really look forward to it. As your friends are beaten and arrested, the professionals need to come out and organise the people."

Red Cross official Richard Nataka said more than 100 injured people had been taken to five centres, including 78 , of whom 10 had gunshot wounds, at the Mulago Hospital.
He said one person had died and a pickup truck brought in a second body shortly afterwards. Red Cross vehicles were arriving at the Mulago Hospital every few minutes with more casualties.

Besigye has held five "walk to work" demonstrations against rising prices and what he calls a corrupt government. On Friday, demonstrators carried posters praising Besigye, and asked why police needed to use violence to arrest him.
Besigye has been released on bail, but is said to be in poor health and still unable to see after pepper spray was fired into his eyes.
 
Uganda Security Block Opposition Leader From Leaving the Country


KAMPALA Uganda -(Dow Jones)- Ugandan authorities blocked the country's main opposition leader Kizza Besigye from leaving the country for medical treatment in Kenya after violent protests rocked the country on Thursday following his violent arrest on Thursday, a senior party official told Dow Jones Newswires Friday.

"They have beefed up security at the airport and there is a standoff right now, they are refusing him to leave," Anne Mugisha, the opposition Forum For Democratic Change's deputy foreign secretary, told Dow Jones Newswires.

Besigye was hospitalized Thursday after the police sprayed him with pepper and teargas after smashing the windows of the car he was riding in. He was later bailed on medical grounds. His arrest triggered violent clashes in the country between protesters and security officials.
 
Uganda Security Block Opposition Leader From Leaving the Country


KAMPALA Uganda -(Dow Jones)- Ugandan authorities blocked the country's main opposition leader Kizza Besigye from leaving the country for medical treatment in Kenya after violent protests rocked the country on Thursday following his violent arrest on Thursday, a senior party official told Dow Jones Newswires Friday.
"They have beefed up security at the airport and there is a standoff right now, they are refusing him to leave," Anne Mugisha, the opposition Forum For Democratic Change's deputy foreign secretary, told Dow Jones Newswires.
Besigye was hospitalized Thursday after the police sprayed him with pepper and teargas after smashing the windows of the car he was riding in. He was later bailed on medical grounds. His arrest triggered violent clashes in the country between protesters and security officials.


Huyu M7 sasa anaelekea kubaya! Amchungulie Bashar na Gadafi afumbuke macho!
 
Huyu M7 sasa anaelekea kubaya! Amchungulie Bashar na Gadafi afumbuke macho!
African rulers are not keen on taking lessons from their peers' past mistakes and references from past events! They can only emulate thieving or brutalizing their subjects.
 
viongozi wa africa ni kama wamerogwa na aliyewaroga nadhani ameshakufa, hawaoni wenzao nini kinawatokea.mungu apishe mbali lakini museveni asome alama za nyakati.
 
I think M7 must understand that time is what prevents everything from happening at once. He has celebrated for too long without noticing that boredom may evolve out of poor governance! Let he now face the anger.
 
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