Activists, journalists, religious leaders, opposition politicians, diplomats irked about massive ongoing abuse
KAMPALA, Uganda
John Mukasa, 29, walked painfully from a hospital where he was treated in the central Uganda district of Wakiso.
“I was released a few days ago. I have been held for over five months at a place I did not know and I cannot remember,” he told Anadolu Agency. “Every day they have been torturing me while asking why I wanted to overthrow the government.”
He said after his torture and realizing that his health was deteriorating, he was taken out of the facility and driven to a bushy place along the road where he was abandoned.
He said people who saw him crawling helped him and took him to the hospital. He was admitted for three days before getting treatment as an outpatient.
Mukasa is not alone.
Kapo Kamya was dumped 45 kilometers (28 miles) from his home, unable to stand because of injuries to his legs.
He was rescued by sympathizers and had swollen legs and hands. Kamya said he was arrested on Dec. 22 at his home in Katoogo.
He told Anadolu Agency that he was beaten with a wire on his ankles, elbows, knees, back, and testicles.
Kamya and Mukasa are ardent supporters of musician-turned-politician, Bobi Wine, the leader of the leading opposition party in Uganda — the National Unity Platform, or NUP.
Since the last presidential elections early last year, cases of abductions, illegal detentions, and harassment by security personnel have become common with the media reporting on them.
Human rights abuses meet backlash
Religious leaders, members of the opposition, donor countries, and human rights activists have condemned torture.
The lead pastor of a Christian ministry in Uganda, Moses Solomon Male, told Anadolu Agency that it is ”unfortunate that the government is torturing innocent people. Today, I see no difference between this regime and that of dictator Iddi Amin Dada of the 1970s in which many people were killed.”
He said that many are crying out that they cannot trace their relatives and friends.
“I believe it is time we stood up and resisted all government excesses,” he said.
The Anglican Archbishop in Uganda Stephen Kaziimba Mugalu said at a national function on Feb. 16 that he is disappointed to “read reports in the newspapers and on social media that there are some security personnel who are torturing civilians.”
Eastern Uganda Muslims spokesman Shiek Ibrahim Kasata told Anadolu Agency: ”The government should immediately stop soldiers and policemen from torturing civilians.”
More than 50 torture survivors, mostly supporters of the NUP, stormed the Office of UN High Commissioner for Human Rights (OHCHR) in Kampala on Feb. 14 and accused the government of harassment and torture and Uganda’s Human Rights Commission of being silent on torture by security operatives.
After handing over a petition concerning torture by authorities and a lack of response by the Human Rights Commission, an activist Yusuf Serunkuma addressed reporters outside OHCHR offices and said: “We want to inform the public and donors that security organs and Uganda human rights commission have sided with a blood-thirsty dictatorship and do not want us to expose the atrocities made on us.”
In a Feb. 10 statement from its embassy in Kampala, the US condemned recurring credible accounts of forced disappearance, arbitrary detention, and physical and mental torture of Ugandan citizens by security forces.
“It reflects poorly on the government and undermines the Constitution of the Republic of Uganda, which under Article 24 states that no person shall be subjected to any form of torture, cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment or punishment,” it said.
Two weeks ago, award-winning novelist Kakwenza Rukirabashaija told Anadolu Agency that he was badly tortured for allegations of abusing the president, along with his son, Lieut. Gen. Muhoozi Kainerugaba. A video went viral in which Rukirabashaija showed bruised ribs and a fractured ankle bone which he sustained while in detention. He recently fled the country.
Opposition MPs walked out of parliament on Feb. 8 to protest alleged injustices that include killings, torture, and illegal arrest of citizens.
President Yoweri Museveni has on several occasions condemned torture by security personnel.
“We went to the bush to fight for freedom. I cannot accept citizens to be harassed by police and army,” he said.
But NUP spokesperson Joel Ssenyonyi said Museveni does not walk the talk. “We have not seen him punishing anybody over torturing our innocent people,” he said.
The minister of state for foreign affairs said: ”The difference between the torture of citizens by dictator Iddi Amin and this regime is that in Amin’s it was state-inspired. But today it is done by a few undisciplined officers who can be held accountable.”
Human Rights Commission Chair Mariam Wangadya defended her office.
“It’s not true that we are not dealing with the cases brought to us by the members of the opposition. What happens is that most of them prefer to report their cases to courts of law instead of coming to us,” she told Anadolu Agency.