Ugandans

 

I was born a natural fighter never believing in oppression. During the Milton 
Obote 11 regime, three of my children were killed by government soldiers, and I 
promised to support any person who came out to fight Obote

 

Let us focus on Getrude Njuba just for a simple basic analysis of this 
nonsense. Getrude Njuba abandoned her family, her husband and children and 
walked into the Bush to undermine the government the intelligent people had 
elected. While in the bush she not only killed or helped to kill Ugandans but 
she slept with Yoweri Museveni and having a son out of him. A son that never 
get talked about what so ever. Getrude came back to her family with this child. 
Can we today define Getrude Njuba as a born fighter? Getrude has a daughter 
that has written a paper in Monitor few days ago, suppose she also abandoned 
her family and slept with a man out there having a baby and showing up later to 
her family with such a baby, would Getrude Njuba define her as a born fighter?

 

And just asking !!!!!

 

EM
On the 49th

 

           Thé Mulindwas Communication Group
"With Yoweri Museveni and Dr. Kiiza Besigye Uganda is in anarchy"
           Kuungana Mulindwa Mawasiliano Kikundi
"Pamoja na Yoweri Museveni na Dk. Kiiza Besigye Uganda ni katika machafuko"

 

From: [email protected] 
[mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Ocen Nekyon
Sent: Saturday, January 25, 2014 6:49 AM
To: Ugandans At Heart At Heart
Subject: {UAH} Women of the liberation struggle - Full Woman - monitor.co.ug

 

http://www.monitor.co.ug/Magazines/Full-Woman/Women-of-the-liberation-struggle/-/689842/2159080/-/d2j1ukz/-/index.html

 

 

 


Women of the liberation struggle - Full Woman


In Summary

Tomorrow will mark 28 years since the National Resistance Army (NRA), marched 
onto Kampala on January 26, 1986. Two women who were hands-on in the war, 
illustrate with their experiences the role played by women in the struggle.

I was born a natural fighter never believing in oppression. During the Milton 
Obote 11 regime, three of my children were killed by government soldiers, and I 
promised to support any person who came out to fight Obote. When Museveni 
promised to go to the bush if the elections were rigged, I was more than ready 
to join him. 
I got into the system at first as a mobiliser, also doing clandestine work. 
When I came to Kampala, my husband asked me to choose between living in the 
bush or staying away from the rebels. I chose the bush because I would have 
been hunted by the government as well as the rebels since I knew their secrets.

Safeguarding the leader’s welfare
By late 1981, we were only three women on the National Resistance council; 
Gertrude Njuba, the late Joy Mirembe, and myself. Joy died in 1982 while giving 
birth, leaving just the two of us. As a member of the NRC, I had no specified 
roles besides sitting in the NRC meeting and deliberating on issues. 
The two of us were put in charge of Museveni’s welfare and there was word in 
the enemy camp that, “Wherever you saw two women, there you would find 
Museveni, so, just hit that place hard”. Much as we never went to the 
battlefield, the two of us ensured the leader of the struggle was safe and 
healthy. 
In 1982, the structure was formalised. Museveni, who had by then been nicknamed 
Chairman High Command (CHC), got a chief bodyguard, and his chief cook was 
Lusigazi. Gertrude and I were to supervise issues pertaining to the CHC’s 
welfare. The day we witnessed his cook dip a finger in his tea to check the 
temperature and serve him half-cooked tea, we requested to personally prepare 
his meals.

I survived the firing squad thrice
There was an incident when a leaf of mujaja (basil) was left in the only kettle 
we had and appeared in CHC’s cup. He had been warned by his auntie who was in 
the bush that he could be bewitched through mujaja. Coincidentally, he fell 
sick after that cup of milk, complaining of “something walking along his 
spine”. 
We were thought to have been a threat to his life and we were threatened to be 
put on firing squad. When Dr Bata examined him, however, he said he was 
suffering from an amoebiasis. I remember taking turns with Gertrude to stay 
awake at night to ensure he took his medication and got well. This would be one 
of the three times I survived a firing squad during that war. From then on, we 
ate the same food we prepared for him from the same plate, including his chief 
bodyguard.

Life in the bush
Our meal conprised four banana fingers, one for each of us, and a piece of meat 
the size of a fist. This was for both lunch and supper. I would cut each banana 
finger and piece of meat into two to have a piece for lunch and another for 
supper. We were not the only women in the struggle.

The other women
There were other women like Proscovia Nalweyiso, now a brigadier, who started 
out as a mobiliser looking for food. She scouted routes for the rebels to 
ensure there were no enemies. When she joined the bush full time, she became 
the head of the first female military camp.

There were other female colleagues who have now passed on like Naduli and Night 
in the military wing and many others whose names I do not recall.
Maria Bata was part of the medical team, among whom was one popularly known as 
Mukyala Kawempe who helped raise Gen Tumwine’s son while in the bush. There was 
an old woman called Malita a traditional healer, and some Catholic nuns. I 
don’t know whether they are still alive.

I served in the first NRM Parliament for nine years until 1995 when a new 
Constitution was promulgated. I bowed out and passed the baton on to 
others . I’m contented with what God has given me, I do not need to shout to 
get what God has not planned for me. What I wanted in the beginning I have 
achieved.

Earning her pips
One day when the rebellion had just started in our village in Gombe, my 
children came at around 10am saying thieves had attacked the village. We picked 
stones and hid in a bush near the house. We threw stones at the house, and 
drove the thieves away. Word spread to the rebels that I had single-handedly 
driven thieves out of my neighbourhood and that is how I gained popularity with 
the rebels (NRA). 
Eventually, I was summoned by Museveni for the first time at the Mondlane camp 
where he told me, “You don’t know me but I have heard about you, I want you to 
be part of my delegation going to meet Kayira”. That is how I joined the 
struggle as a senior officer and member of the NRC, then the rebel Parliament.

Capt Gertrude Njuba
When I joined the struggle, I was under the supervision of Matayo Kyaligonza, 
now Uganda’s High Commissioner to Burundi. I started out as a courier within 
Buganda region based in Kampala. Besides taking information to and from the 
bush, I was responsible for recruiting government deserters into our camp. For 
those who deserted with guns, I had to find a way of ensuring that those guns 
got to the bush.

I was responsible for publishing the letter declaring war against the Obote 
government in 1981, and distributing it to different embassies in Uganda and 
other strategic locations. Because of the sensitivity of the letter, I used a 
cyclostyler to publish it. 
When panda gari started in Kampala, I was asked not to come back to Kampala by 
the Chairman of The High Command for my safety. That was how I changed from 
being a courier to Personal Assistant to the Chairman High Command.

My duties in the bush
I was responsible for ensuring that his food, water and anything he ate was 
safe. There had been a rumour that Obote had sent people to infiltrate our camp 
and poison him. I was also responsible for the struggle’s little finances and 
all the documentation until 1984 when I went out of the country on other 
assignments. Nairobi became my base as I took on the role of a mobiliser, 
spreading word of the struggle among Ugandans in the diaspora and other 
nationals we thought could be of help to us.

I also solicited for arms, guns and ammunition since in the bush, the guns were 
not enough for the trained men we had. The chairman sent me out to deliver 
letters to Samora Machel of Mozambique, to Kenya, Tanzania Sweden, Denmark, 
England among other countries, soliciting support for the struggle.

Hardships in the bush
Bush life was not easy. Many times, men had to raid hospitals and health 
centres, not necessarily for medicine but to get cotton wool for us for that 
time of the month. At some point, nature seemed to accept that we could not 
meet the needs of a normal life and the system blacked out, only to get back to 
normal when we left the bush, without any medical intervention.

Remembering fellow women in arms
One of the instrumental women in the struggle was Joy Mirembe. She had been 
involved with armed struggle since the FRONASA days. She was the one who took 
on the new women and inducted them into bush life. Other women specialised in 
finding herbs used to treat wounds which were the biggest problem.

 

They also knew herbs for different ailments like malaria, headache, stomachache 
among others. This being Africa, there was also a group of women that 
specialised in healing spiritual afflictions whenever our boys complained of 
being disturbed by spirits.

Women like Dora Kutesa led the mission which rescued now General Salim Saleh 
from prison. Proscovia Nalweyiso, now a brigadier, left her teaching job and 
joined in active military. Captain Oliver Zizinga was another great woman, some 
of whose children were killed during the struggle. I worked with her as the 
most senior women in the bush. Winnie Byanyima joined the struggle at the point 
of the peace talks in Nairobi as part of our delegation, where she was 
appointed to take minutes of the deliberations.

Some of the women who were actively involved the NRA bush war. Winnie Byanyima, 
and Brigadier Proscovia Nalweyiso, who headed the first NRA female battalion in 
the bush.

Women of the liberation struggle - Full Woman - monitor.co.ug

http://www.monitor.co.ug/Magazines/Full-Woman/Women-of-the-liberation-struggle/-/689842/2159080/-/d2j1ukz/-/index.html‎

‎

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