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Saturday 7 May 2011

Demonstration by The Uganda Pro-Democracy Forum

Photo by Kamulali.06/05/2011.

Uganans have had a peaceful demonstration in London at Uganda House(Uganda Embassy) condemning the government acts in
  • Abuse of human rights and use of lethal weapons in killing of Innocent citizens of Uganda.
  • Torture and imprisonment of people and opposition leaders by military,police and other security organisations.
  • Corruption and Skyrocketing prices of goods and services in the Uganda under the leadership Plan of The worst dictator Museven and his family tree.
We call upon all Ugandans to be strong not to give up on what is ours because it is our country and we are citizens of Uganda.
Uganda united Pro-Democracy Forum will not give up until the dictator Museveni has resigned from leadership and his family tree.
Posted By the coordinator of Uganda united Pro-Democracy Forum.

Sunday 1 May 2011

UGANDA PROTESTS: Five dead, 700 people arrested

One of the cars rioters set ablaze in Mbale yesterday. Eighteen suspects were arrested.
One of the cars rioters set ablaze in Mbale yesterday. Eighteen suspects were arrested. PHOTO BYDAVID MAFABI.  
By Monitor Team

Posted  Saturday, April 30 2011 at 00:00
At least five people are confirmed dead as a result of fatal gunshot wounds after a bloody day of rioting, bringing the death toll to 10 people killed since demonstrations began three weeks ago.
Kampala Metropolitan Spokesman Ibin Ssenkumbi last evening identified three of the victims as Samuel Mufumbira, a vendor at the city’s St. Balikuddembe (Owino) Market who was shot in the head, Frank Kizito, shot in Busabala and Ssemuga Kanaabi.
Another two were shot in Bwaise and Bweyogerere, Ssenkumbi said.
Uganda Red Cross Society secretary general Michael Nataka seperately confirmed the deaths of two men, in Kasubi and Najjanankumbi. Mr Nataka said the society has attended to at least 200 people, of which 139 were referred to hospital – 20 of these for bullet wounds.
A two-and-half-year-old baby girl, Patricia Namugenyi, was in critical condition at Mulago after reportedly having been shot in the stomach. Her mother Annet Nabukenya, a Namasuba resident, wailed uncontrollably as she looked on.
Mr Nataka said the bulk of yesterday’s injuries came from Kasangati, Kiwatule/Ntinda, and Najjanankumbi areas.
While the riots centered around Kampala and its suburbs, they also took place in five other towns, from Entebbe to Mbale.
About 700 people have been arrested in total – 400 in the Kampala Metropolitan area alone.
First Son Lt. Col. Kainerugaba Muhoozi, commander of the elite Special Forces Group, personally took charge in what is believed to have been the epicentre of violence, in Kisekka Market downtown.
But soldiers expelled journalists from the area, and blocked those who stayed from photographing their actions. In Jinja town, military police roughed up Saturday Monitor journalist Denis Edema, confiscated his digital camera and deleted pictures of their confrontation with protestors on Kirinya Road until UPDF Spokesman Felix Kulayigye intervened.
On receiving end
Elsewhere, photographers whom some security operatives accused of taking only “bad pictures” found themselves on the receiving end of police beatings.
Ambulances with their sirens blaring were heard across the city throughout the day – continuously delivering the injured to hospital. Among them were two policemen with gunshot wounds and a soldier.
In Mbale, a government car was torched in a dramatic confrontation – anti-riot police momentarily fled after running out of teargas in the face of advancing protestors.
Police say they arrested 18 suspected rioters in the eastern district.
Traffic on Jinja and Gulu highways was temporarily interrupted – people arriving in affected towns fled back home as automatic weapons rang out.
Military police commandeered armoured vehicles to beat back the protestors who pelted them with stones. The heavily-guarded convoy of Chief of Defense Forces, Gen. Aronda Nyakairima, was stoned at Najjanankumbi on Entebbe Road, but Lt. Col. Kulayigye said the army commander was not in his official vehicle at the time.
“The situation required us to come in to support internal security organs to restore stability and order,” the UPDF spokesman said.Plumes of black smoke filled the city skies and suffocating teargas sent residents scampering for fresh water to wash their burning eyes. Internal Affairs Minister Kirunda Kivejinja is yet to address the press on the day’s mayhem, widely believed to have been sparked by the violent and humiliating arrest of opposition leader, Kizza Besigye on Thursday.
He did however issue a statement on the arrest, justifying police actions that saw Besigye tear-gassed directly in the face, potentially causing permanent eye damage, and brutally dragged from his car.
Reported by Philippa Croome, Justus Lyatuu, Mercy Nalugo, David Mafabi, Pauline Kairu, Martin Ssebuyira, and Emmanuel Mulondo
http://www.monitor.co.ug/News/National/-/688334/1153286/-/c25d53z/-/index.html

Normalcy returns to Kampala

Friday, 29th April, 2011.
Policemen beat a suspected rioter in Mbale
Policemen beat a suspected rioter in Mbale


RIOTS erupted in Kampala and a few other towns yesterday morning, a day after the arrest of FDC boss Kizza Besigye. However, by mid-afternoon, calm had returned to Kampala and other trouble spots.

Besigye had been released on court bond on Thursday. The rioters, however, protested yesterday, citing excessive force by security.

The unrest started in Kampala’s Kisekka Market before spreading to downtown Kampala and the suburbs.

Angry youth burnt old tyres, barricaded roads with stones and logs and smashed car windscreens after rumours that Besigye was dead.

They engaged the Police and army in running battles in the city centre and several suburbs, including Kireka, Bweyogerere, Nateete, Bwaise, Kalerwe, Nakawa, Banda, Namasuba, Zana, Najjanankumbi, Kyaliwajjala, Kasubi, Kawempe and Ntinda.

Makerere University students also threatened to demonstrate but Police moved in quickly and stopped them.

Using waste paper and polyethylene bags, the rioters lit bonfires on Kampala and Jinja roads, disrupting public and private transport.

There was a rush to leave the town, but taxis and bodaboda were not available or hiked the fares. Many walked home, getting caught up in more riots in the suburbs.

Kampala RDC assures
Kampala RDC assured people of security and said calm had returned.

“Anybody who continues to involve in riots or looting and distribution of subversive propaganda will face the law,” Alice Muwanguzi warned in a statement.

She added: “I wish to assure residents and those who work in the city of protection.”

Entebbe road
Traffic to the Entebbe International Airport was cut off for a long time after big groups blocked sections of the highway. The often busy road was blocked at Namasuba, Zana and Najjanankumbi. By 2:00pm, calm had not returned to that part of town.

In many places, the Police and army used tear gas and batons to disperse the rioters. People scampered as tear gas canisters were ejected from a pistol-like device into the air.

The Police also used a water cannon truck, which constantly released a coloured, itchy liquid into the crowd. The Uganda Red Cross Society said two people died and over 140 were injured.

Subsequently, several streets and roads, namely Kampala Road between the Constitutional Square and Hotel Equatoria, Bombo Road, Ben Kiwanuka Street, Kyaggwe Road, William Street and Burton Street, were deserted.

After calm was restored in Kisekka market, Lt. Col. Muhoozi Kainerugaba, the Special Forces boss, arrived in an armored vehicle, commonly referred to as Mamba.

He got out of the vehicle and interacted with other soldiers and a senior policeman, before jumping back into the vehicle that left via Nabugabo Road. A military pick-up truck and a Land Cruiser followed.

Similar scenes played out else where in the country.

The demonstration spread to the entire town where fires were lit. The rioters lit kiosks, prompting several traders to lock themselves up in shops while others dashed home.

A white double-cabin truck belonging to the fisheries department in Mbale was burnt beyond repair although its occupants were unhurt.

The Police were deployed to quell the riot, but were overwhelmed as the people threw back the smoking tear gas canisters at them. This prompted the army to deploy.

Mbale Police chief Charles Opolot said over 30 people were arrested. By press time, normalcy had returned to Kampala and Mbale.

In Wobulenzi, on the Kampala-Gulu highway, violent youth tried to block the road, but were dispersed.

US, Commonwealth react to Besigye arrest
Meanwhile, the US Government and the Commonwealth Secretariat have condemned the manner in which Besigye was apprehended.

In separate statements, they said the state agents’ actions raised “deep concerns.”

US assistant secretary Johnny Carson called for dialogue and reconciliation to resolve the differences between the Government and the opposition. He said there should “be a scope for civil peaceful protests” and that government reaction should be “tempered, responsible and civil”.

“We have seen the reports of the arrest of several former presidential candidates for attempting to carry out peaceful demonstrations in Kampala that were designed to highlight rising oil and food prices. We have also seen with great concern and regret the serious and apparent mistreatment of one of those candidates, Dr. Besigye,” the statement read.

The Commonwealth also said the manner in which Besigye was arrested was of “deep concern” to them.

Besigye has been the main protagonist in the walk-to-work demonstrations for the last three weeks.

The US embassy acting deputy spokesperson in another statement condemned the continued detention of opposition leaders. DP president Nobert Mao is still detained in Nakasongola Prison.

“We are troubled by the tragic loss of life and injuries at the hands of Uganda’s security forces during the recent “walk-to-work” protests, as well as the continued detention of opposition leaders,” said Mark Toner, acting deputy spokesperson.

Jinja
Jinja was largely peaceful after security thwarted plans by people in Kirinya to foment trouble. However, by presstime, residents of Kagoma Central had blocked the road to Kamuli.

Contributed by Herbert Ssempogo, Barbara Among, Donald Kirya, Raymond
Baguma, Juliet Lukwago and Luke Kagiri
http://www.newvision.co.ug/D/8/12/753467

Hundreds hospitalised after city riots

Friday, 29th April, 2011
Military police patrolling the streets
Military police patrolling the streets.

TWO people died and over 140 were admitted to Mulago Hospital with various injuries sustained in the city riots, the Uganda Red Cross said. Mulago Hospital publicist Daniel Kimosho said they had not received any bodies.

However, by presstime, Police and Mulago medical staff had carried out postmmortems and unconfirmed reports indicated that five people had died.

The body of one of the victims identified as Samuel Mufumbira, 24, was brought to the hospital by Good Samaritans who picked it from Owino Market.

The identity of the other victims had not been identified by press time. His body was handed over to the Police by the Red Cross.

Many of the injured were admitted after inhaling teargas, while others had gunshot wounds. Among the injured was a two-and-a-half-year-old girl, Patricia Namugunya, who was shot in the thigh.

Two policemen who also sustained gunshot wounds and some pregnant women were among those admitted.

Richard Nataka, the Secretary General, Uganda Red Cross Society, attributed the injuries to live bullets and teargas.

Some of the victims were badly bruised, which Nataka said resulted from scamparing for safety.

“We deployed three ambulances in different hotspots, but as the chaos continued, we had to increase the number to eight due to the overwhelming number of injuries,” Nataka said.

“They were hard to access because roads were blocked. We ran out of blankets and had to get about a hundred more for the patients to use,” Nataka said.

Names of some of the injured

1. Francis Awiyo -Kawempe
2. Ronald Ssebutinde -Nsambya
3. Augustine Mbogga-Makindye
4. Frank Kibiri -Kabowa
5. Richard Akena
6. Jane Namakula
7. Robert Ssekaggo -Namasuba
8. Sam Mugisha
9. Sam Ogwang -soldier attached to Kireka barracks
10. Mike Nyaru-soldier attached to Kakiri Baracks
11. Steven Mulongo-Mulago
12. Swaibu Ruhamire
13. Martin Areku –Nsooba
14. William Luswata –Makindye
15. Robert Rubangizi –Kabuusu
16. Angella Matovu-Kyebando
17. Mary Prossy Nansubuga –Kamwokya
18. Zahara Hahumuza
19. Faizal Kaggwa-Mpereerwe
20. Aggie Nalweyiso –Nangabo
21. Nassif Ssenkungu
22. Jane Nakalema
23. David Gumisiriza
24. Joan Kalema
25. Omuyindi Ramshey
26 Charles Serugo
27. Bonny Kiweewa
28. Yakubu Menya
29. Robinah Nankya
30. Rashidah Nanyonga
31. Aisha Nakato
32. Juliet Nakase
33. Juliet Namatovu
34. Shamim Namubiru
35. Gertrude Nagadya
36. Annet Lwanga
37. Sumayiya Nancura
38. Fredrick Ampiire
39. Judith Atweine
40. Kagimu Kasule
41. Ezideo Kizito
42. Tom Katikiro
43. Steven Kibirige
44. Frank Chedra
45. Martin Trust
46. Jimmy Bujumbiro
46. Isma Jjuuko