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Violent clashes stir tensions ahead of Uganda elections

February 15, 2016

Police briefly detain Kizza Besigye days before presidential vote, prompting Kampala crowds to come out in support.

At least one person has been killed in Uganda's capital Kampala as police clashed with opposition supporters after briefly detaining a top presidential candidate twice as he tried to hold campaign ralies days before the country's general election.

Several people were wounded in the clashes as police fired bullets and tear gas while opposition supporters hurled rocks and erected street barricades in the capital's Wandegeya suburb, witnesses said according to a Reuters news agency report..

Main opposition leader Kizza Besigye, who heads the Forum for Democratic Change (FDC) party, was held on Monday evening, his second brief detention of the day, after marching with thousands of supporters to a rally ground in Kampala. He was released soon afterwards, a party spokesperson said.



Police said Besigye was held because he did not stick to an authorised route, and his diversion would disrupt businesses.

“Police can confirm one person died during the confusion today,” Kampala police spokesman Patrick Onyango told the AFP news agency, without giving further details.

Opposition politicians told AFP that three people had been shot dead, but the claims could not be independently verified.

FDC spokesman Semujju Nganda said “several” supporters were injured during scuffles with police.

“We protest in the strongest terms police brutality towards our supporters
and targeting our candidate,” he said.

But Frank Tumwebaze, minister for the presidency, said it was “madness” that Besigye had tried to hold a rally in the centre of the capital, saying the police had a duty to ensure calm.

He accused Besigye of “seeking publicity… after sensing defeat ahead”.


READ MORE: Uganda opposition threatens election boycott


The outbreak of violence came just three days before presidential and parliamentary elections are due to take place on February 18.

Coleen Nantongo, an FDC parliamentary candidate for Kampala Central, said the unrest cast a dark cloud over the upcoming polls.

“Uganda is doomed,” she said. “We cannot have a fair election when this is what the police do. Whenever there are elections they tear-gas us and arrest us, so how can we be expected to have a fair competition?”

Earlier in the day, Besigye, who has lost three disputed elections against long-running president Yoweri Museveni, was also briefly detained for leading a procession of supporters in Kampala.

Opposition supporter James Magara, 40, said that the arrests raised doubts that the election would be free and fair.

“There is no democracy in Uganda, and now the whole world will see it. Museveni does not want to lose so he sends the police after us, but this time we will not accept it. We will not let him continue like this,” he told Al Jazeera.



Although parts of the campaign period have been relatively peaceful in Kampala, the international community has before raised concerns over repression of opposition figures.

In October 2015, Besigye was placed under “preventive arrest”, which stopped him from campaigning.

Thursday's election will mark the fourth time Besigye, Museveni's former doctor, who has been leading the country for 30 years, will have challenged the president for the country's top post.

Additional reporting by Tendai Marima. Follow Tendai on Twitter: @i_amten

The post Violent clashes stir tensions ahead of Uganda elections appeared first on African Media Agency.

Source:: http://amediaagency.com/violent-clashes-stir-tensions-ahead-of-uganda-elections/

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