Home featured stories Dozens arrested at anti-corruption march to Parliament

Dozens arrested at anti-corruption march to Parliament

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Uganda police and military police detained scores of demonstrators who were marching to Parliament in a protest against corruption on Tuesday July 23 morning.

The detainees include the alleged protest leaders, in the capital Kampala, as scattered anti-corruption rallies took place despite being banned by authorities.

Some of those arrested include Sylvia Namutyaba, Habib Buwembo,  and John Bosco Sserunkuma.

They were  arrested at Arua Park police post by joint security forces while attempting to march to Parliament.

Earlier, the security forces cut off the planned assembly venue at Railway Grounds. This forced the protesters to relocate and divide themselves into small groups to avoid detection.

Some emerged from Nasser Road while others emerged from the side of Mengo. However, the security agencies had heavily deployed, arrested many and dispersing others.

At Parliament, security created a barricade, keeping away any form of protesters, with the House scheduled to resume it’s plenary sessions after recess.

Riot police were out in force across Kampala, with police spokesman Kituuma Rusoke saying the authorities will “not allow a demonstration that will risk peace and security of the country”.

President Yoweri Museveni, who has ruled the East African country with an iron fist for almost four decades, had warned at the weekend that the demonstrators were “playing with fire”.

On the eve of the rally, Ugandan authorities had cracked down on the opposition, besieging the headquarters of the National Unity Platform (NUP) of former presidential candidate Bobi Wine and arresting several of his party’s MPs.

As Tuesday’s rallies began, a lawyer confirmed that dozens of protesters were arrested in Kampala, with our reporter witnessing at least two detained near parliament.

“Corruption has to end today,” one of them shouted – wearing a T-shirt calling for the resignation of the Speaker of Parliament Rt. Hon Anita Amongo – as they were detained by heavily armed officers.

Three protest organisers were arrested as they marched towards parliament, the lawyer Ashraf Kwezi told Media, adding that, “they were taken to unknown place by the police”.

He named them as George Victor Otieno, Kennedy Ndyamuhaki and Aloikin Praise Opoloje.

“This is the price we are ready to pay and we are not stopping,” he said.

There were roadblocks on mostly quiet streets, especially near Kampala’s business district, that were heavily manned by police officers in anti-riot gear with some wearing camouflage uniforms.

Posters shared information online ahead of the rallies urged demonstrators to march to parliament, but nearby roads were cut off by security forces.

The call to action over corruption has been mostly organised online, drawing inspiration from the mostly Gen-Z led anti-government protests that have roiled neighbouring Kenya for a month.

“We are here to prove that it is not the police which has the power but the constitution,” protester and human rights lawyer Ezra Rwashande told media.

“We are not relenting until we have the corrupt out of office,” he added.

Police spokesman Rusoke said that “some people who defied police directive not to engage in the March to parliament and have been picked for questioning”.

A police operation was “ongoing”, he added, without giving details on the number of people arrested.

A heavy police presence also remained in place around NUP headquarters in Makerere Kavule Bombo road. A day after opposition leader Bobi Wine said the building was “under siege” by police and army officers.

On Monday three lawmakers with the opposition group were detained by police on “various offences and remanded to prison,” according to the police spokesperson who did not give further details on the charges.

Yesterday Hon. Robert Kyagulanyi Ssentamu, called for people to support the anti-corruption demonstrations, “We want a country where we all belong not for the few in power,” he said.

NUP spokesperson confirmed three legislators, along with seven others connected to the party, had been detained.

Tuesday’s march was organised mainly on social media with the hashtag #StopCorruption by young Ugandans — some 15 million citizens out of a population of 45 million are under the age of 35, according to the latest census data.

Graft is a major issue in Uganda, with several scandals involving public officials, and the country is ranked a lowly 141 out of 180 countries on Transparency International’s corruption index.

Earlier this year, the United States, Britain and UAE imposed sanctions on several Ugandan officials that include the parliamentary speaker Anita Among and two former ministers over alleged corruption.

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