Uganda's President Yoweri Museveni arrives to
deliver his state of the nation address in the capital Kampala June 4, 2015. Photo: Reuters
|
Ugandan police arrested two top opposition leaders on
Thursday, as President Yoweri Museveni sought to thwart a fresh challenge to
his long-entrenched leadership.
The arrest of former prime minister Amama Mbabazi and Kizza Besigye comes
amid protests in Burundi, Burkina Faso and the Democratic Republic of the Congo
against their long-serving leaders, which suggest it may not be easy for Mr.
Museveni to keep his increasingly young voting bloc in check.
The Wall Street Journal
(WSJ) report continues:
“Protest movements have
now found their roots in a youth frustrated by poverty, a dearth of economic
opportunities, social restrictions and a lack of political accountability,”
said Ronak Gopaldas, head of country risk analysis at South Africa’s Rand
Merchant Bank.
Mr. Mbabazi was detained
at a roadblock 40 miles east of Kampala while traveling to what would have been
his first public rally since announcing last month that he would challenge the
four-term president in elections scheduled for next year.
“He has been charged with
disobeying lawful orders because he defied a police directive to drive back to
Kampala” said Josephine Mayanja, Mr. Mbabazi’s spokeswoman.
Police spokesman Fred
Enanga said Mr. Mbabazi hadn’t been cleared by his party—the National
Resistance Movement—to hold rallies, but Mr. Mbabazi said he doesn’t need party
clearance. “These meetings are illegal and we strongly advise the public to
ignore them,” Mr. Enanga said.
Dozens of Mr. Mbabazi’s
supporters were also arrested as they prepared for the rally in the coffee-producing
hub of Mbale in Eastern Uganda. Since Mr. Mbabazi announced last month that he
would try to deny Mr. Museveni a fifth term, scores of his supporters have been
detained, and many remain in custody.
Police said Mr. Besigye
was also arrested Thursday as he left his home to attend a separate meeting
with his supporters in Kampala. Mr. Besigye belongs to the Forum for Democratic
Change.
Mr. Museveni, in power
since 1986, has described the defection of his longtime ally Mr. Mbabazi as
“wrong.”
“Our method of work
doesn't involve that kind of conduct,” said the 70-year old, who seized power
in a 1986 coup.
Mr. Museveni’s supporters
say he is a steady hand who can protect their country from the chaos that has
overwhelmed neighbors like the Democratic Republic of the Congo and South
Sudan. Backers of Rwanda’s President Paul Kagame use a similar argument in
lobbying for their long-serving leader to amend the constitution so that he too
can seek another term in 2017.
Mr. Museveni’s road to
re-election in February 2016 will offer the latest test of whether Africans are
growing tired of heavy handed leaders who hold on to office for decades.
“Good leaders don’t die
in power,” Mr. Mbabazi said this week.
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