Ahead Of Anti-Corruption March Uganda Protests, President Museveni Says Protestors ‘Playing With Fire’
Post By Diaspoint | July 23, 2024
Young Ugandans have planned a march towards the Parliament on Tuesday calling out the various human rights abuses and corruption in the government.
The ripples of the protests in Kenya have made their way to the neighbouring country of Uganda. Young Ugandans have planned a march towards the Parliament on Tuesday calling out the various human rights abuses and corruption in the government.
However, before Tuesday’s protest, Ugandan President Yoweri Museveni warned the protestors and opposition parties of “playing with fire” if they decide to continue the march.
Why Is Uganda Protesting?
Inspired by the recent anti-government protests in Kenya where thousands took to the streets and called for President William Ruto’s resignation, residents of Uganda have decided to do the same.
The main aim of the protest is to call out the corrupt practices and various human rights abuses taking place in the East African country.
Speaking to AFP, protestors have stated that this march on Tuesday is the “starting point in the fight against corruption in the parliament”.
Despite the police denying permission to hold the demonstrations, activists and protestors have announced that they will “exercise their right to peaceful protest” and carry on with the march.
The unrest in Uganda also comes after the United States and the United Kingdom imposed sanctions on high-ranking officials in the Ugandan Government over allegations of corruption. These names include those of parliamentary speaker Anita Annet and two other government ministers – Mary Goretti Kitutu and Agnes Nandutu. All three have denied charges of being corrupt.
Opposition HQ On Lockdown Ahead Of Protest
As per the latest reports, Ugandan police and security forces have imposed a lockdown at the opposition’s headquarters in Kampala.
Police and soldiers have cut off access to the office of the National Unity Platform (NUP) ahead of the anti-government march on Tuesday.
NUP Leader Robert Kyugulanyi, also known as Bobi Wine, has alleged that several opposition leaders have been “violently arrested”.
“These cowards have turned the National Unity Platform Headquarters into a military barracks,” he wrote on social media platform X.
Wine, a 42-year-old pop star turned politician has emerged as one of the leading opposition voices against Museveni, the 79-year-old President who has been in power since 1986.
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