Ugandan opposition leader Bobi Wine to seek presidency, chides West over rights

Ugandan opposition leader and singer Robert Kyagulanyi Ssentamu, known as Bobi Wine looks on after his arrival to address Ugandans living in South Africa on political issues in their home country, at the sports ground in Germiston, southeast of Johannesburg, South Africa, October 3, 2023. REUTERS/Siphiwe Sibeko/File Photo
Ugandan opposition leader and pop singer Bobi Wine said on
Friday he plans to run for president for a second time and criticised the West
for not speaking out more against "gross human rights violations" in
the country.
Wine, 43, whose real name is Robert Kyagulanyi, will be
challenging long-serving President Yoweri Museveni, 80, who is widely expected
to seek re-election.
"Yeah, I've expressed my availability on behalf of my
team," Wine said in an interview with Reuters when asked whether he would
stand again in the East African country's next presidential election, due in
January.
Participation in the election, he said, will also be "a
fighting opportunity to further undress and expose the regime and to further
galvanise the people of Uganda to rise up and free themselves."
Wine came second in the last election in 2021 but rejected
the outcome, alleging ballot staffing, falsification of results, beatings and
intimidation by soldiers and other irregularities.
Wine criticised Western governments for not denouncing what
he said were escalating human rights violations, including abductions, illegal
detention and torture of his supporters and officials. Wine did not single out
any country for criticism.
"Some leaders in the West are complicit in our
suffering. They are here to crack their (business) deals and they don't care
about human rights," he said.
"If they were standing for the values that they
profess, then they would be castigating all these gross human rights
violations."
Uganda is considered by the West as an ally in the fight
against jihadists and has deployed troops in Somalia.
Uganda's justice minister said this week that
Eddie Mutwe, an activist in Wine's National Unity Platform (NUP) party, who
also doubles as his personal bodyguard, appeared to have been tortured while
in captivity.
Museveni's son and head of the military, Muhoozi
Kainerugaba, said he had kept him in his basement and that he was
using him as a punching bag.
After missing for a week, Mutwe was on Monday produced in
court, charged with robbery and remanded.
Wine said Mutwe told him he had been electrocuted,
waterboarded and beaten.
Police spokesman Rusoke Kituma did not respond to a Reuters
call for comment on the allegations. Reuters contacted a spokesperson for
Uganda's defence forces seeking comment from Kainerugaba. He did not respond.
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