Museveni's son, Muhoozi Kainerugaba, threatens US ambassador with expulsion

FILE - Then-Lt. Gen. Muhoozi Kainerugaba, son of Uganda's President Yoweri Museveni, attends a ceremony in Entebbe, Uganda, May 7, 2022.
The chief of Uganda’s defense
forces, General Muhoozi Kainerugaba, has given U.S. Ambassador William Popp
until Monday morning to apologize or leave the country.
It is not clear why Kainerugaba, who is President Yoweri
Museveni’s son, issued the ultimatum to the ambassador, although this week the
United States sanctioned four Ugandan police officers for human rights
violations.
On Friday, Kainerugaba took to X three times to say Uganda
was about to have a serious confrontation with Popp for “disrespecting our
beloved and celebrated president and for undermining the constitution of
Uganda.”
Five hours later, Kainerugaba tweeted again, saying if Popp
did not apologize to the president personally by 9 a.m. Monday for what the
general called Popp’s undiplomatic behavior, the government would demand that
he leave.
Speaking to VOA, Sewanyana Livingstone, director of the
Foundation for Human Rights Initiative Uganda, said Kainerugaba has no
authority to declare Popp persona non grata unless he is appointed minister of
foreign affairs.
“He needs to calm down. He needs to understand that Uganda is not him, neither is he Uganda,” Sewanyana said.
“Uganda will always be there.
Sanctions are not the functions of an ambassador. They are issued by the State
Department. So, I think he is even targeting the wrong person. I think Ugandans
need to call him to order. It’s high time.”
On Wednesday, U.S. State Department spokesperson Matthew
Miller said four Ugandan police officers had been sanctioned for gross
violations of human rights. These included torture and cruel inhumane treatment
and punishment.
The police officers were identified as Bob Kagarura, Alex
Mwine, Elly Womanya and Hamdani Twesigye.
The State Department said reports of the violations as
documented by Ugandan civil court documents, civil society organizations and
independent journalists were serious and credible.
A report released last month by the African Center for
Treatment and Rehabilitation of Torture Victims, or ACTV, noted that torture
cases in Uganda were on the rise despite laws against the practice.
Herbert Sam Nsubuga, executive director of ACTV, said the
organization was concerned about the situation in Uganda.
“The situation is not as good as we want it to be,” Nsubuga
said. “Because just halfway this year, we have made 903 cases. So, it’s still
really an issue.”
In 2023, monitors in Uganda recorded 1,235 cases of torture,
with the Uganda People’s Defense forces and police as top perpetrators.
The four designated officers in April 2020 raided a Ugandan
legislator's home, accusing him of violating the regulations put in place to
control the spread of COVID-19 as he distributed food to vulnerable
communities.
According to records produced in court, the legislator,
Francis Zaake, was arrested and detained at the Defense Intelligence and
Security headquarters, where he was tortured before he was left at a hospital.
He later sued the four officers, and a court awarded him
$20,400.
In response to VOA questions on Kainerugaba’s threats, the
U.S. Embassy in Uganda quoted State Department spokesman Miller as saying the
embassy, the ambassador and the U.S. government were continuing to work
directly and normally every day with Ugandan authorities on a full range of
issues.
Miller said in accordance with U.S. law, the United States
was committed to supporting justice for victims and accountability of those
involved in human rights violations around the world.
This, he said, includes denying or restricting travel visas to visit the United States for individuals when there is demonstrated evidence that they have committed abuses.
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