Uganda military chief threatens to attack eastern Congo town of Bunia
![Uganda military chief threatens to attack eastern Congo town of Bunia Uganda military chief threatens to attack eastern Congo town of Bunia](https://citizentv.obs.af-south-1.myhuaweicloud.com/145095/conversions/UG-og_image.webp)
Lt. General Muhoozi Kainerugaba, the son of Uganda's President Yoweri Museveni, who leads the Ugandan army's land forces, looks on during his birthday party in Entebbe, Uganda May 7, 2022. REUTERS/Abubaker Lubowa/File Photo
Uganda will attack the town of Bunia in neighbouring eastern
Congo unless "all forces" there surrender their arms within 24 hours,
the chief of Ugandan defence forces, General Muhoozi Kainerugaba, said in a
post on X on Saturday.
Kainerugaba, who has a history of posting provocative
comments on foreign policy, said he had the authority of President Yoweri
Museveni, who is also his father. A spokesman for Uganda's military said he
could not comment on the matter.
Earlier on Saturday, Kainerugaba had said, without providing
evidence, that people from the Bahima ethnic group were being killed in the
Democratic Republic of Congo.
"My people, the Bahima are being attacked. That's a
very dangerous situation for those attacking my people. No one on this earth
can kill my people and think he will not suffer for it!" he said.
"Bunia will soon be in UPDF hands," he said in a
separate post, referring to the Uganda People's Defence Force.
Congo's Prime Minister Judith Suminwa told Reuters on the
sidelines of an African Union summit on Saturday that her government had
"no comment to make" on Kainerugaba's remarks.
The threat from Uganda's top military officer, who is widely
believed to be Museveni's heir apparent, has stoked fears that a conflict
between Congolese forces and Rwandan-backed M23 rebels could flare into a wider
regional war.
On Friday, an M23 leader said the rebels had
entered Bukavu, the second-largest city in the eastern Democratic Republic of
Congo, following the capture of Goma, the largest city, at the end of last
month.
Citing U.N. sources, Reuters reported earlier in
February that Uganda had deployed more than 1,000 extra soldiers in eastern
Congo under the auspices of an operation to help Congo fight Islamist
militants.
But U.N. experts say Uganda has also backed the ethnic
Tutsi-led M23.
Kainerugaba has been publicly supportive of Rwanda's
President Paul Kagame, who has denied accusations that Rwandan troops are
fighting alongside M23.
In 2022, Kainerugaba referred to M23 as "brothers of
ours" fighting for the rights of Tutsis in Congo.
Observers said the posts were aimed at sending a message
about Uganda's economic and geopolitical interests in Congo's Ituri province,
of which Bunia is the capital.
"Uganda seems to be sending a message that it's
claiming 'its territory'," Kristof Titeca, a professor at the University
of Antwerp, told Reuters.
"All of this is concerningly similar to 1998 and the
Second Congolese war, when there was a similar division of territory among
Uganda and Rwanda."
Kainerugaba routinely makes inflammatory posts on social
media, including a threat in 2022 to invade neighbouring Kenya.
Last month Kainerugaba said he wanted to behead Uganda's
most prominent opposition leader, Bobi Wine. He later apologised for that
threat and sometimes says that certain posts are meant ironically.
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