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Wednesday 29 June 2011

Police lead in rights abuse - report

                                          Policemen beat a suspect recently.

The police have for the third year running been named the leading abuser of human rights according to the latest Uganda Human Rights Commission report.
The UHRC 13th Annual Report also shows a further decrease in reported human rights abuses committed by the army and its intelligence arm, the Chieftaincy Military Intelligence (CMI) which for years had stood out for torture, extrajudicial killing and other maltreatment of suspects held in its detention centres.
Army cleaner
Cases reported against the army dropped from 106 to 84, those naming military intelligence from seven to one, and for the Internal Security Organisation from 11 cases to seven.
Out of the 848 human rights cases registered, 305 complaints were against the police followed by private individuals with 231 cases. It also shows males were the most abused with 531 cases out of the 848 complaints. The army is now number three on the UHRC rankings of abuse with 84 cases followed by the Rapid Response Unit of police with 53.
In Bududa, the report says government’s intervention did not comply with the principles of a human rights approach to disaster preparedness and management and it violated people’s rights to health, information and paid little attention to the concerns of children.
Yesterday’s revelations cast more doubt on the stated efforts to professionalise the police which instead of making strides in maintaining law and order is now widely criticised as an institution of torture.
Presenting the report to the Speaker of Parliament, the Human Rights Commission Chairman, Mr Med Kaggwa, said torture or cruel, inhuman and degrading treatment or punishment continued to be the most common rights violation as was the case in 2009.
Of the cases filed against the police, 147 were violations of the right to freedom from torture or cruel and inhuman treatment while 128 were on detention without charge beyond the constitutional limit of 48 hours. Of the 231 cases against private individuals, 197 were on alleged violation of the right to child maintenance, 14 were violations of the right to property, and nine were violations of the right to freedom from torture.
Torture is outlawed under Article 24 of the Constitution which says that no person shall be subjected to any form of torture or cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment or punishment. Although the report covers 2010, the police has, since the beginning of the year, been on the spot for brutal treatment of civilians and suspects especially during the Opposition-led walk-to-work campaigns against the rising cost of living and price of fuel where the Force repeatedly deployed excessive force -- brutal beatings, firing of live bullets, leading to the death of civilians including children and use of coloured water against peacefully protestors.
For this, the US-based Human Rights Watch condemned the climate of “impunity and serious abuses by the police and military” and called for prompt, effective, and independent investigation into the violence. Condemnation of this impunity was echoed by the international community and civil society organisations which criticised the government for reportedly threatening democracy by violently clamping down on the right to freedom of expression and peaceful political demonstration.
Responding to the UHRC report, Mr Livingstone Ssewanyana, who heads the leading non-public rights defender in the country, Foundation for Human Rights Initiative, yesterday said the police’s topping of the list shows that Uganda still faces a challenge in ensuring that police acts in accordance with the law.
“Police still has challenges in how to handle hardcore criminals and that’s why they resort to suing excessive force,” he said. “There is need for respect of the law, respect of the population, and a need for attitudinal change within the Force and unless those things are achieved, police will continue to top the human rights abuse charts. When contacted, Police Spokesperson, Judith Nabakooba, and her deputy, Vincent Ssekate, said they have not received a copy of the report but will make an official response the moment they get a copy.
The Inspector General of Police, Maj. Gen. Kale Kayihura, was unavailable for comment. An aide who answered his phone said Maj. Gen. Kayihura was too busy. But Rapid Response Unit chief Joel Aguma said since he assumed office late last year, strict measures have been taken to ensure that the rights of suspects are respected. “We have liaised with the Professional Standards Unit to cross-check individual behaviour and there has been great improvement ever since I took office,” he said, adding that some of the officers who are cited in human rights abuse complaints are subjected to disciplinary action.
The report cites human rights abuses in detention facilities around the country especially the continued detention of children with adults at Kagadi Prison, Muhororo Police Post, Soroti CPS, Kitgum Police Station and Kyegegwa Prison, and the torture and solitary confinement of prisoners in Bugungu Prison, Lotuturu Prison farm, Kitgum Central Prison, Dokolo Prison farm, Lira Central Police Station and Erute and Awer Police post.
 

Roots of Corruption in Uganda

Bukenya being congraculated by a suppoter at Court last week.Photo By Arthur Kintu.

The Constitutional Court has ordered the Anti-corruption court stop proceedings into the prosecution of Former Vice President Prof. Gilbert Bukenya pending the hearing of his petition. Bukenya petitioned the constitution court, saying he performed his duties on behalf of the president and cabinet and should not be prosecuted as an individual. The Constitutional Court will rule on the petition filed by Prof. Bukenya's lawyers on July 5.

http://www.monitor.co.ug/News/National/-/688334/1191210/-/bypldjz/-/index.html

Sunday 26 June 2011

Uganda as a failed state

Dr. Kizza Besigye at his home in Kasangati after he was discharged from Kampala hospital on Thursday 14th.

When security agencies subjected opposition leader Dr Kizza  Besigye to brutal arrests during the ‘walk to work’ protests in April and May, they unwittingly placed Uganda into the spotlight of ‘failed states’.
Today, the country ranks among the top 30 failed states on the index dubbed ‘Postcards From Hell, 2011’. The index published by the influential Foreign Policy (FP) magazine on June 20 specifically cites Besigye’s violent arrests as the reason Uganda places twenty-first out of 117 countries.
“From all appearances, the democratic opening in Uganda is closing and human rights are the collateral damage. Protests have been blocked; cell-phone service has been sporadically cut off,” the index notes.
“Ugandans hoping for relief for the growing ranks of the poor will also be disappointed. Analysts blame [President] Museveni’s government for spending more to win elections than to ensure public welfare.”
Uganda is followed, in 22nd position, by North Korea, a regime that has been bashed by the West for being: “fastidious about keeping news from getting out and keeping the world from getting in.”
The country has company among the failed states class, faring slightly better than some of her neighbours in the East African region and neighbouring states:  Somalia (1), Sudan (3), DR Congo (4), Burundi (17), Kenya (16), Zimbabwe (6), Ethiopia (20) and Central Africa Republic (8). Rwanda is in 34th position.
According to FP, Somalia, Chad, and Sudan have topped the list of failed states for four consecutive years. This 2011 failed states ranking was prepared by the Fund for Peace and looks at the world’s most vulnerable countries.
The index, according to FP, obtained information from 130,000 publicly available sources, analyzed 177 countries and rated them on 12 indicators of pressure on the state during the year 2010 – from refugee flows to poverty, public services to security threats.
“Taken together, a country’s performance on this battery of indicators tells us how stable – or unstable – it is. And the latest results show how much the 2008 economic crisis and its ripple effects everywhere, from collapsing trade to soaring food prices to stagnant investment, are still haunting the world,” the magazine states.
But Livingstone Sewanyana, the executive director of Foundation for Human Rights Initiative, says that while Uganda has challenges in enhancing democracy, it is not fair to rank it as a failed state. This, he says, is underestimating progress the country is making in areas of security, road network, universal primary and secondary education.
“Much as the election was not free and fair, we now have a parliament and a judiciary that are free to speak,” Sewanyana says.
He adds, however, that Uganda has challenges of consolidating a culture of law enforcement that adheres to constitutionalism and offers adequate space for the opposition to play their role under a multiparty dispensation.
He also cites challenges in citizenship democracy, media freedom, and in ensuring that law enforcers do not engage in acts of torture.
“Uganda has not been fairly ranked as a failed state; a failed state has no functioning parliament, the judiciary is not functioning, it is under siege and conflict. I do not agree with the ranking but I cannot deny the challenges,” he says.
Similarly, Information and National Guidance minister Mary Karoro Okurut believes that to rank Uganda as a failed state is totally wrong.
“Things are running smoothly, they cannot call us a failed state in total anarchy. It is not just wrong, it is a misdirected missive,” she says.
The FP magazine warns that Uganda might decline from its 21st position to a more miserable ranking. It notes: “Uganda’s incumbent President Yoweri Museveni was reelected in February, but the opposition has cried foul and his inauguration was met with violent protests.”
As for Kenya, the magazine says the country moved out of the top 15, showing that it continues to recover from its bloody post-election ethnic warfare of recent years.

http://www.observer.ug/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=14022:uganda-as-a-failed-state&catid=78:topstories&Itemid=59