Re: [WestNileNet] KAY AMIN'S DEATH: REALITY Vs FANTASY

2015-11-24 Thread cdmale
Juruga,

I have refused to watch the last king of Scotland because of the very reason 
you had avoided to watch it until now.


Sent from my iPod

On 2015-11-15, at 4:17 AM, Hussein Amin  wrote:

> Photo: My mother Kay Amin (RIP) welcoming a guest at State House Nakasero 
> (1974). Picture taken a month before she died. 
> 
> I just watched "The Last King Of Scotland" for the first time. The highly 
> acclaimed movie about my father. I had intentionally ignored the film because 
> I already knew it was the same old smear campaign. 
> 
> Amin himself, while in Saudi Arabia, had previously been sent several copies 
> of the book from which the movie was made. He read the summary at the back, 
> then dumped it. 
> 
> My late mother features in the movie. Her role is played by African-American 
> Hollywood star Kerry Washington. 
> 
> I remember the painful reality discovering my mothers death. I looked up at 
> my father and saw tears in his eyes. She died on August 14th 1974. 
> 
> I wouldn't wish such an event to happen to any wife, any mother, any sister 
> or any daughter. Or to anyone for that matter. 
> 
> My last memory of her was when she waved goodbye as I was being taken to 
> boarding school. As a parent myself today, I know how she must have been 
> feeling. 
> 
> My grandfather was a reverend. Together, we regularly visited her at the 
> church cemetery where she was laid to rest. She had remained a devout 
> Christian even after getting married to my Muslim father. And he had accepted 
> her with her christian faith, partly as respect to her father being a notable 
> man of the church. 
> 
> I found it quite extraordinary that the movie twists a painful family 
> experience to cause mockery against my family. 
> 
> But to then insult a mothers dignity yet she suffered such a painful end is 
> just heartless. 
> 
> The movie is malicious as they portray her in a secret relationship, that she 
> died while trying to terminate a pregnancy. Yet the fictional white gentleman 
> they show her with, actually never existed. 
> 
> Others have even come out to claim that the affair depicted in the movie was 
> with a Ugandan. 
> 
> The reality is that 4 men abducted my mother from her home the day she died. 
> That was the last time she was seen alive. 
> 
> This fact is problematic. Because then the whole movie story about her 
> wouldn't make sense anymore. 
> 
> The world would then know that Kay Amin was simply abducted forcefully from 
> her home by armed assailants and murdered. 
> 
> So what the film producers did was to try and cause disrepute to a 
> respectable woman. 
> 
> The Ugandan rebels "covert operations" could maybe brief us how their men 
> picked her from her flat opposite Kiseka market in downtown Kampala and 
> murdered her. 
> 
> Someday I hope to have an amiable chat particularly with Mr. Amama Mbabazi 
> (secret name: Ahmed Mbayo) who says in his 2016 Presidential candidature 
> profile that he single-handedly coordinated their activities inside the 
> country from 1972.  
> 
> However, for the British author who wrote the book, some say it must have 
> been sheer vindictiveness to try and harm her reputation this way even in her 
> death. 
> 
> They explained that there are certain events that were painful to the west. 
> For example seeing a black African being carried shoulder high on a chair by 
> white people. Seeing others kneeling before the same man. 
> 
> These were momentous images that remain so to this day. They still hurt some 
> white people. 
> 
> As I watched the movie, I saw how Hollywood has excelled in Goebbelism (as in 
> Joseph Goebbel who did the Nazi's disinformation campaigns). 
> 
> They then applauded themselves internationally. "An outstanding performance" 
> critics said. 
> As we know, "The Last King of Scotland" went on to win best movie, best actor 
> and other movie industry perks. 
> 
> Glamour and paparazzi cameras filled venues as Hollywood celebrities attended 
> the movie's premiers and cinema awards to enjoy my parents being maligned. 
> 
> Yet others had previously claimed that Kay Amin paid the ultimate price for 
> the so-called Ugandan liberation. That her death helped gather international 
> support against Idi Amin. 
> 
> We might all recall how they seemed to mourn her when she died. Calling my 
> father a brutal murderer for her death. A butcher. Only for Hollywood to turn 
> around unfairly against her today, and basically insult her as some 
> unfaithful whore. 
> 
> I discovered that for a dysfunctional western society to get social harmony, 
> they desperately need to denigrate someone together. 
> 
> They have suddenly done the same to Ghaddafi these days. Months before he was 
> killed, Ghaddafi was enjoying their courtesy. 
> 
> But then suddenly, he also became "the most brutal dictator in Africa" after 
> they killed him. 
> 
> But this time, while Ghadaffi is reviled in western writings, many 

[WestNileNet] KAY AMIN'S DEATH: REALITY Vs FANTASY

2015-11-19 Thread Hussein Amin
Photo: My mother Kay Amin (RIP) welcoming a guest at State House Nakasero
(1974). Picture taken a month before she died.

I just watched "The Last King Of Scotland" for the first time. The highly
acclaimed movie about my father. I had intentionally ignored the film
because I already knew it was the same old smear campaign.

Amin himself, while in Saudi Arabia, had previously been sent several
copies of the book from which the movie was made. He read the summary at
the back, then dumped it.

My late mother features in the movie. Her role is played by
African-American Hollywood star Kerry Washington.

I remember the painful reality discovering my mothers death. I looked up at
my father and saw tears in his eyes. She died on August 14th 1974.

I wouldn't wish such an event to happen to any wife, any mother, any sister
or any daughter. Or to anyone for that matter.

My last memory of her was when she waved goodbye as I was being taken to
boarding school. As a parent myself today, I know how she must have been
feeling.

My grandfather was a reverend. Together, we regularly visited her at the
church cemetery where she was laid to rest. She had remained a devout
Christian even after getting married to my Muslim father. And he had
accepted her with her christian faith, partly as respect to her father
being a notable man of the church.

I found it quite extraordinary that the movie twists a painful family
experience to cause mockery against my family.

But to then insult a mothers dignity yet she suffered such a painful end is
just heartless.

The movie is malicious as they portray her in a secret relationship, that
she died while trying to terminate a pregnancy. Yet the fictional white
gentleman they show her with, actually never existed.

Others have even come out to claim that the affair depicted in the movie
was with a Ugandan.

The reality is that 4 men abducted my mother from her home the day she
died. That was the last time she was seen alive.

This fact is problematic. Because then the whole movie story about her
wouldn't make sense anymore.

The world would then know that Kay Amin was simply abducted forcefully from
her home by armed assailants and murdered.

So what the film producers did was to try and cause disrepute to a
respectable woman.

The Ugandan rebels "covert operations" could maybe brief us how their men
picked her from her flat opposite Kiseka market in downtown Kampala and
murdered her.

Someday I hope to have an amiable chat particularly with Mr. Amama Mbabazi
(secret name: Ahmed Mbayo) who says in his 2016 Presidential candidature
profile that he single-handedly coordinated their activities inside the
country from 1972.

However, for the British author who wrote the book, some say it must have
been sheer vindictiveness to try and harm her reputation this way even in
her death.

They explained that there are certain events that were painful to the west.
For example seeing a black African being carried shoulder high on a chair
by white people. Seeing others kneeling before the same man.

These were momentous images that remain so to this day. They still hurt
some white people.

As I watched the movie, I saw how Hollywood has excelled in Goebbelism (as
in Joseph Goebbel who did the Nazi's disinformation campaigns).

They then applauded themselves internationally. "An outstanding
performance" critics said.
As we know, "The Last King of Scotland" went on to win best movie, best
actor and other movie industry perks.

Glamour and paparazzi cameras filled venues as Hollywood celebrities
attended the movie's premiers and cinema awards to enjoy my parents being
maligned.

Yet others had previously claimed that Kay Amin paid the ultimate price for
the so-called Ugandan liberation. That her death helped gather
international support against Idi Amin.

We might all recall how they seemed to mourn her when she died. Calling my
father a brutal murderer for her death. A butcher. Only for Hollywood to
turn around unfairly against her today, and basically insult her as some
unfaithful whore.

I discovered that for a dysfunctional western society to get social
harmony, they desperately need to denigrate someone together.

They have suddenly done the same to Ghaddafi these days. Months before he
was killed, Ghaddafi was enjoying their courtesy.

But then suddenly, he also became "the most brutal dictator in Africa"
after they killed him.

But this time, while Ghadaffi is reviled in western writings, many Africans
are adamant to see that his true legacy on the African continent and in his
country remain alive.

Idi Amin found out about my mothers death when he received a phone call at
his office. Police accidentally discovered the crime, then contacted him to
report the unbelievable finding.

But the movie ignores some key criminal facts to try and violate a humble
mothers integrity. A woman who was intelligent and caring about others.
It is also a subtle insult to African women.

Thanks Mr. Giles Foden! You