I am fighting abuse of power, Ugandan General declares

May 30, 2013 (KAMPALA/JUBA) – An army officer, who recently fell out
with the Ugandan government, now says he is fighting against power
abuse in the country.

JPEG - 17.6 kb
General David Sejusa (New Vision)

Gen. David Sejusa, currently in the UK, told the Associated Press (AP)
Wednesday that the Ugandan military was a “prison” allegedly used by
the country’s President Yoweri Museveni to sideline ambitious army
officers from challenging him for power.

“Abusing the law and institutions just to keep the current leadership
in power ... pretty soon will lead to ceaseless strife in Uganda,” he
said.

Uganda’s military laws bar serving officers and soldiers from
participating in electoral politics.

Last month, the feared army general, penned a letter to the internal
security service calling for an investigation into reports that
high-ranking officials were at risk of assassination, should they
oppose what he referred to as the “Muhoozi project.” Brig. Muhoozi
Kaneirugaba, president Museveni’s son, is allegedly being groomed to
succeed his father when the latter bows out.

The letter, extensively published by various media outlets in Uganda,
sparked off lots of controversies within the military. Several media
houses, including the country’s independent Daily Monitor, newspaper
were shut down and while police besieged their premises for over a
week.

The army accuses Gen. Sejusa, who coordinates Uganda’s intelligence
services, of spreading propaganda that encourages rifts within the
army.

Paddy Ankunda, the army spokesman was quoted saying an official
investigation has already been instituted into Sejusa’s conduct.

Museveni, in power since 1986, recently made impromptu changes in the
military, removing his army chief, Gen. Aronda Nyakairima and his
deputy, Gen. Ivan Koreta. The two officers were cited in the general’s
letter as some of those opposed to the rise of the first son.

Recent intelligence information have, however, revealed the extent of
the renegade general’s fallout with the president and how the security
bosses want to deal with the situation

On April 30, president Museveni reportedly summoned four top trusted
aides to State House for an emergency meeting. These included, the
Inspector General of Police, Lt. Gen. Kale Kayihura, Gen. Aronda,
Brig. Muhoozi and the chief of military intelligence, Brig. Charles
Bakahumura.

The meeting, according to media reports, was called to discuss Gen.
Sejusa’s alleged threat within the military circles and how his
activities could be contained before it escalates.

Museveni, during the meeting, reportedly accused the army general of
organising deserters, Iraqi returnees and civilians with military
potential under the guise of intelligence operations.

According to Museveni, the senior army officer, would then send those
guys around to collect information on strength, combat readiness and
morale of UPDF with special interest in Special Forces Command (SFC),
especially armored brigade, mechanized units, air defenseetc, which
are strategically critical.

"Some of the people he was using are said to have reported back to
Museveni about these incidents," Uganda’s The Independent magazine
reported.

(ST)

-- 
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups 
"South Sudan Info - The Kob" group.
To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email 
to [email protected].
To post to this group, send email to [email protected].
To view this discussion on the web visit 
https://groups.google.com/d/msgid/SouthSudanKob/CAJb14opz%2BY12BBNXO_Ptwiycmca9eYAseCBaXKzgb5aSh7EHSg%40mail.gmail.com?hl=en-US.
For more options, visit https://groups.google.com/groups/opt_out.


Reply via email to