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Monday, 5 May 2014

[RwandaLibre] Uganda, Rwanda & Kenya are becoming unpleasant countries, dangerous to work in, or even to visit.

 

Uganda: Breaking the media blackout


Andre Vltchek is a novelist, filmmaker and investigative journalist.
He has covered wars and conflicts in dozens of countries.

Published time: May 05, 2014 14:40
Photo by Andre Vltchek

Uganda, Rwanda and Kenya are becoming truly and increasingly
unpleasant countries, dangerous to work in, or even to visit.

Tags

Africa, Arms, Army, Clashes, Conflict, History, Human rights, Mass
media, Military, Politics, Security, Violence, War

Of course not if you are a foreign trader in diamonds or uranium, or
if you are a military attaché from a friendly Western country, or from
Israel… But if you are an independent investigative journalist, or
even a UN official that criticizes, your life is patently at risk.

I am walking down the street, in the middle of Kampala, with my
Ugandan friends. Suddenly, one of them stops, then points at a tall
man walking in the opposite direction, on the other side of the
street:

"Look at him… That is a Kenyan intelligence agent…" He gives his name.
"He used to be so thin, you know… He has AIDS. But they gave him all
sorts of drugs so now he is as huge as a mountain again. He does a lot
of killing here, also torturing. He tortured some of our people, from
the opposition. They bring Kenyans here to do this kind of job, as
they have no emotional attachment to this country; no personal links…"

In front of the entrance to the State House, I try to photograph heavy
concrete blocks, guardhouses and soldiers. I use a small Leica, but in
just a few seconds I am surrounded by soldiers, one of them is clearly
from neighboring Rwanda.

This is my, perhaps, 25th visit to Uganda, and I feel suddenly
exhausted. I don't want to argue, to play tricks with the camera, or
present some official documents in order to get myself out of this
situation. I simply show them the image, and then calmly delete it. My
friends are from the opposition. I don't want any trouble. I worry
about them more than about some photo.

People say that intelligence agencies from the West and Israel are
operating all over Kenya, especially towards the border with Somalia,
near the historic city of Lamu. Recently on the high seas, several
terrified fishermen told me (I hired a boat to investigate), that
Kenyan patrol boats are operating, have been for quite some time,
carrying Western soldiers on board, and that the local Muslim people
get regularly kidnapped, interrogated, tortured… and that some even
disappear.

Photo by Andre Vltchek

There are British military bases in Kenya. There are countless and
bizarre NGO's operating in both Uganda and Rwanda. There are military
folks, and those countless US military flights to and from Entebbe
airport. And there are heavy trucks, transporting booty from the
destroyed DRC to Ugandan airports and to the main Kenyan port of
Mombasa.

Kenya is now occupying the southern part of Somalia. Uganda and Rwanda
are plundering the Democratic Republic of Congo, which is full of
highly priced raw materials like coltan and uranium. They are all
untouchable, as they act on behalf of Western companies and
governments. In the meantime, the number of corpses in the region is
mounting, nearing some 10 million since 1995.

Both Uganda and Kenya are closely linked with that bizarre
geopolitical entity called South Sudan, a country created by the joint
neo-colonialist policies of North America and Europe – a country that
became a failed state even before it was truly declared independent,
and which is there only to serve the political and especially economic
interests of the West.

'Media blackout'

To legitimize it, there is an almost bulletproof media blackout –
almost no reporting on the severity of the situation. Those few
reports that make it to the mainly non-corporate media, immediately
get attacked and smeared by the always vigilant and paid 'bloggers',
who use smear tactics quite similar to those used against any
objective reports on Venezuela, Russia, China or Ukraine, even
Thailand.

While those abovementioned countries, plus many others such as Cuba,
Zimbabwe, South Africa, Eritrea, and North Korea, are constantly
bombarded by projectiles coming from Western mass media, the true
rogues such as Uganda, Rwanda, Kenya, but also the many desperados
(torturing and robbing their own people) like Indonesia and
Philippines, are either glorified or at are least spared the most
damaging criticism. It is because they are ready to sacrifice their
own people (and people in neighboring countries) and to deliver them,
together with all the riches, to the altar of the Western economic and
political interests.

While the West manufactures 'opposition' wherever there is a system
that puts local people first, the most outrageous, even grotesque
dictatorships, like those in Uganda, enjoy unapologetic support of the
Empire.
It is easy to understand why.

Photo by Andre Vltchek

Chris Lwanga, a senior political assistant to Presidential aspirant
James Akena from the UPC (Uganda People's Congress), explained to me
where President Museveni
(http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yoweri_Museveni) comes from. We
discussed it, frankly, over a few bottles of beer, in some backstreet
bar of Kampala.

"The founding father of our Party and of our country, Dr. Milton
Obote, was always at odds with the West. He also spoke out against the
atrocities committed by Museveni's troops, those that fought against
Obote and Uganda as 'rebels'. Dr. Obote always insisted that it was
actually the West fighting against him, as the United States and
Europe never forgave him for his decisive anti-imperialist stance. He
was always accusing Museveni of being simply a tool of imperialism,"
Akena told me.

Dr. Obote was an African stalwart of the anti-imperialism and
anti-colonialism struggle of the 1960's and 1970's, a comrade and
equal to such enormous personalities of Africa as Julius Nyerere, and
Patrice Lumumba.

Then the next day I found myself sitting across the table from Mark
Engena, a grandson of Milton Obote. I was listening to his heated
speech, directed against one of the closest allies of the West in
Africa.

"Museveni is destroying Uganda. He is taking away people's land.
Courts of law have lost all their meaning… Our education system has
collapsed, and so, if you have no money for private schools, your kids
will go uneducated… Government workers don't get paid for months.
Government hospitals get their water turned off, because, although
they are 'public', the water companies are not – water has been
privatized through an IMF scheme. After the water was recently been
switched off, children went down with horrible diarrhea, but nobody
here seems to care!"

All this, of course, does not matter to those in London and
Washington, as Yoweri Museveni is supplying the West with all those
precious raw materials extracted in the DRC. His soldiers are
murdering and they are plundering. So is, of course, the Rwandan RPF,
under the leadership of yet another great Western ally, President Paul
Kagame. The only difference is that, while Kagame has blood all over
his hands, he at least shares some of the booty from the Congo… He
shares it with his own people, while Museveni and his military are
corrupt to the extreme, and stubbornly unwilling to share.

Of course both Kagame and Museveni are old allies and pals. The United
States, as confirmed in my documentary film "Rwanda Gambit" by former
US Ambassador to Rwanda, Robert Flatten, was arming Kagame's Tutsi RPF
before the genocide of 1994. And Paul Kagame was then based in Uganda,
serving as the intelligence head of the Ugandan military, allegedly
torturing and murdering members of the anti-Museveni opposition.

Photo by Andre Vltchek

faa

From Ugandan soil and with the full knowledge and support of Mr
Museveni, the RPF and Kagame were launching savage attacks against
Rwanda. These attacks helped to divide Rwandan society, they
aggravated the divide between Hutus and Tutsis; a divide which finally
led to the 1994 outburst of violence.

'Trusted military'

The Ugandan military is so trusted by the West, that it is allowed to
serve in the most sensitive 'peace missions', including those in
Somalia.

And whenever the UN (or some brave individuals inside the UN) or
others accuse Uganda (and Rwanda) of committing genocide in the
Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC), the West immediately comes to the
rescue of both of its brutal but obedient allies.

As the BBC reported "A UN report into the killings of Hutu civilians
in the Democratic Republic of Congo during the 1990s says they may
constitute "crimes of genocide… It accuses Rwandan, Ugandan and
Burundian forces of participating in the attacks, and recommends that
the international community seeks to prosecute those responsible…"

There are other reports, accusing Uganda and Rwanda of the most
atrocious crimes against humanity, still being committed until this
day. All of them made irrelevant by Western mass media and the
establishment.

The 'involvement' of Rwanda and Uganda in DR Congo is, of course, well
documented, in the 2010 "UN Mapping Report" and in the conclusions of
other investigations. But after the UN "Mapping Report" went to print,
Mr. Museveni allegedly got very angry, which was enough to force the
UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon to fly to Kampala to shamefully beg
the dictator not to abandon UN peacekeeping missions!

"Both Rwanda and Uganda are plundering DR Congo, killing millions.
Museveni admitted it, Kagame never has. But both regimes are
dictatorial, with close links to the West. And the Western public is
unaware of what is happening," explained Nii Akuetteh, a Ghanaian
political analyst, during our meeting in Washington.

That is not all. Ugandan citizens, including those who used to serve
in the Ugandan military, even in the DRC, are freely recruited and
employed by US security companies, and allowed to serve inside the US
army and air force bases in both Afghanistan and Iraq.

On the way to Entebbe International Airport, my driver, Mugonza
Esmile, recalled how he served for 3 years at the Balad US air force
base in Iraq:

"On our air force base alone, there were 1700 Ugandans, working as
security people, and drivers. I was a driver… All over Iraq, there
were thousands more. We were recruited here in Uganda, most of us by
private companies like Drashak from Dubai. Then, we were 'handled' by
a company based in the United States – called 'SOC' ("Secure Our
Country"). On the base, there were people belonging to other nations,
but only the US, Ugandan and UK personnel were allowed to carry guns.
Yes, it is clear that the relations between Washington, London and
Kampala have been wonderful."

Photo by Andre Vltchek

"Before we were deployed, Americans checked everything: our age,
mental health, and also the way we were thinking… Among us, there were
former Ugandan soldiers who fought in the Democratic Republic of
Congo… You see, it is actually one tremendous business – Ugandans
working in Iraq and Afghanistan… There are many private security
companies employing Ugandans."

I asked Mr. Mugonza whether he ever had some second thoughts; whether
he was questioning the morality of serving in occupied and thoroughly
destroyed Iraq?

"No", he replied without any hesitation. "The only regret I had was
that the Obama administration began cutting funds. At the beginning we
were getting paid some 800 dollars a month… Later it was only 500
dollars… And our recruiting company, as well as the Ugandan
government, were taking substantial cuts…"

Military actions, deployment, plundering – it was all huge business.
And what mattered the most, was the US$300 cut.

'Hidden weapon'

Uganda is a mess. A brutal civil war raged in the north of the
country. There, according to countless reports, HIV-positive military
men were ordered, periodically, to rape rebellious soldiers and
insurgents [In 2006 Uganda barred HIV positive soldiers from some
military training programs – RT]. Mr. Museveni hates gays, and he
occasionally threatens them with capital punishment just for being
what they are. But homosexual rape, many say, is something he approves
of.

Arthur Tewungwa, Ugandan opposition figure and political analyst,
recently shared his thoughts with me:
"When the war began, lots of men were sodomized by the military… These
were men and boys, who were just villagers from the North; belonging
to the Acholi tribe. Recently, the Refugee Law Project, an NGO, took
on their cases: 240 cases… These are actually cases of people who were
willing to come forward, despite the stigma that is attached… Lots of
soldiers were HIV-positive, and it appears that it was actually the
strategy, to send HIV soldiers to the North."

The same allegations were made about Museveni and his involvement in
the DRC, where Ugandan soldiers who were HIV-positive, were sent and
where they committed sexual crimes and atrocities. In Uganda, crimes
were committed mostly against men, in DRC, against both men and women.

The President admitted that his soldiers committed atrocities, at the
recent rally commemorating 28 years of his rule.
Mr. Tewungwa continues:

"More seasoned observers, meaning those that know Museveni, are not
fooled. His own former chief of intelligence Joseph Kony, and
commander of the fighting troops General David Sejusa, made a speech
in London, in which he all but admits to atrocities carried out by
government soldiers there: "I exposed Mr Museveni's problems and
atrocities; you can go [and check], you know what happened in
parliament, against the atrocities in the north and the prolonging of
the northern war by Mr Museveni. I was the first to bring it up."
These atrocities highlight the hypocrisy that surrounds the current
debate surrounding the anti-homosexuality bill. Rape was used as a
weapon of war and men were also sodomized. The Refugee Law Project has
the testimonies of those courageous enough to admit to being
sodomized. I use the word "courageous", not in the context of
stigmatization as those that pander to the myth of homosexuality being
alien to Africa, but in the context of real genuine fear of
retribution by the state for exposing its methods of warfare."

A trader from Bunia in eastern Democratic Republic of Congo sells
fabric at a market at the Kyangwali refugee settlement in Hoima
district in Western Uganda (Reuters / Edward Echwalu)

In Uganda now, it appears that everything is for sale. Corruption,
both moral and financial, is the main engine that propels the country:
not forward, but in bizarre circles. Museveni, the military and the
Christians (including some of the most bizarre, mainly Protestant
cults) are in the driving seat, but the West is firmly behind this
grotesque and brutal dictatorship, which is making even the rule of
Idi Amin Dada look like some mildly deranged version of a Scandinavian
democracy.

"The social situation in Uganda is terrible and continuously
deteriorating", explained Mr. Kaliija James Kats, Program Manager of
YLF Uganda. "People are at the edge."

They are, but often they turn against each other, instead of against
the powers behind their troubles.

The West needs the natural resources of DRC and South Sudan.
Therefore, it is paying for 'Uganda's stability'. It is paying
everyone there; everyone who is promoting the West's economic and
geopolitical interests.

"The opposition, the civil society, the government – everybody is
getting money from the West," a young opposition writer and activist,
Ms Doreen Nyanjura, told me, two years ago.

"Does it mean that whoever wins will be obliged to go to Washington
and London for guidance?" I asked.

"This is a very poor country…" she replied.

Recently, she abandoned the opposition, and joined the ruling party, I
was told.

In the meantime, heaps of corpses in DRC, South Sudan and Uganda are
piling up to unbelievable heights - millions and millions of lost
lives.

Both the West, and the United Nations are deeply involved in perhaps
the worst ongoing genocide on the face of the earth. And the general
public in developed countries is stubbornly pretending that it went
blind.

The statements, views and opinions expressed in this column are solely
those of the author and do not necessarily represent those of RT.

http://rt.com/op-edge/156876-uganda-military-bases-army/

--
SIBOMANA Jean Bosco
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“The hate of men will pass, and dictators die, and the power they took from the people will return to the people. And so long as men die, liberty will never perish.”

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