By Frank Kamuntu
Dozens of people who joined scattered anti-corruption rallies in the capital Kampala on Tuesday in defiance of an official ban have been charged and held behind bars, their lawyers said.
About 60 people, including a prominent TV and radio presenter and three young protest leaders, were hurriedly brought before the courts and remanded in custody on charges including being a “common nuisance”, they said.
President Yoweri Museveni, had warned at the weekend that the demonstrators were “playing with fire”.
Riot police were out in force across Kampala, manning roadblocks especially near the business district, while officers sealed off roads to parliament.
Police spokesman Kituuma Rusoke had said the authorities would not allow any demonstration that threatened Uganda’s “peace and security”.
The call to action over corruption was organised by young Ugandans online, with colourful posters urging people to march on parliament, drawing inspiration from neighbouring Kenya’s mostly Gen-Z-led anti-government protests.
Graft is a major concern in Uganda, with several high-profile scandals involving public officials, and the country is ranked a lowly 141 out of 180 countries on Transparency International’s corruption index.
“We are tired of corruption,” protester Samson Kiriya shouted from between the bars of a police van as he was arrested.
About 60 people who were detained during the rallies were brought before the courts in separate hearings, their lawyers said.
They included well-known television and radio presenter Faiza Salima as well as a social media influencer and a doctor, lawyer Ashraf Kwezi said.
“The three were charged with a flimsy offence of being a common nuisance… and disorderly after they participated in the protest today but they denied the charges,” he said.
Three protest organisers named as George Victor Otieno, Kennedy Ndyamuhaki and Aloikin Praise Opoloje who were arrested as they marched to parliament have also been charged.
Another five were charged in a separate hearing at another court, their lawyer Patience Muwanguzi said.
“This was a rushed trial. They were arrested and taken to court in a very short time and remanded to prison without securing them bail,” she said.
“We will ensure these people receive justice.”
Crackdown On Opposition
Human Rights Watch Uganda researcher Oryem Nyeko condemned the multiple arrests, and said they were “a reflection of where Uganda is at the moment as far as respect for those rights is concerned”.
On the eve of the rally, Ugandan authorities had besieged the headquarters of the opposition National Unity Platform (NUP) of former presidential candidate Bobi Wine and arrested three of his party’s MPs.
A heavy police presence remained in place around the offices in a Kampala suburb on Tuesday.
“Salutations to all who have courageously marched and are still marching against corruption and misrule —- even in the face of very brutal actions by the military and police!” Wine, whose real name is Robert Kyagulanyi, posted on X.
Sanctions
Corruption is endemic in Uganda, where several high-profile figures have recently come under the spotlight in graft scandals.
Earlier this year, the United States and Britain slapped sanctions on several Ugandan officials including parliament speaker Anita Among and three former or current ministers for alleged involvement in corruption.
The ministers are on trial accused of stealing iron sheets destined for the poor under a government-funded project and redirecting them to politicians and their families, but no charges have been laid against the speaker.
Four legislators from Uganda’s ruling party and two senior civil servants are also in custody for allegedly embezzling large sums of money meant to compensate farmers who lost property during the 1980s bush war that brought Museveni to power.
“We are not relenting until we have the corrupt out of office,” protester and human rights lawyer Ezra Rwashande said during the rallies.
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