Remo,

Hope you and Yuga will publish these recollections into a book !!

--------------------


http://www.monitor.co.ug/Magazines/ThoughtIdeas/How-Amin-smuggled-his-family-from-Entebbe-fire-to-Libya/-/689844/1753568/-/11f6key/-/index.html



Under the line of fire. April 11 marked 34 years since Idi Amin was
overthrown by a combined force of Tanzania People’s Defence Forces
(TPDF) and Ugandan exiles. In this fourth part of our series – Idi
Amin: The Last Days – as told by his son Jaffar Remo Amin, we reveal
how a panicking Amin executed a daring mission to evacuate his family
out of Entebbe to Libya as mortar bombs were falling on the runway.

Upon arriving in Kampala, we were tentatively enrolled at Buganda Road
Primary School by the chief presidential protocol officer Nasr Ondoga,
who was responsible for all the president’s personal affairs, for the
final duration of our childhood stay in our beloved country.

All the children who had left Kabale Preparatory School (apart from
Mwanga Alemi who went to reside with his mother at Command Post Kololo
and Asha Mbabazi who went to reside with her mother in Kololo as
well), were resident with Mama Sarah Kyolaba at the present day
Kampala State House, Nakasero (formerly Nakasero Lodge).

During this time, no one During this time, no one was residing at
Entebbe State House and it was only used for State Functions as
Entebbe was near the war front and constant infiltration from the
porous “Masaka, Mpigi shoreline” rendered it unsafe to stay there.
This was mostly in March 1979 and Kampala was taken in April 1979.

Dad’s bombastic propaganda statements continued on radio. On March 26,
1979 Radio Uganda announced that the President was “cut off at
Entebbe.” We would go so much as to affirm dad’s victory announced by
the Uganda Broadcasting Corporation on March 26, 1979 when it
announced that “the President was cut off at Entebbe but managed to
repel the enemy forces with the support of loyal troops”.

Announcements through the radio
The announcement by the radio station might have had some truth in it
since this was the exact time dad was negotiating with Libyan leader
Muammar Gaddafi to receive his immediate family into Tripoli, and he
needed the still useful Entebbe International Airport. The invading
troops were still more than 70 miles away from Kampala when dad was
negotiating with Gaddafi to receive us. Since vanguards of the
so-called liberation forces had possibly already infiltrated some
parts of the route to Entebbe by the time dad was frantically trying
to get us out of Uganda, he addressed the nation asking “Ugandans who
believe in God to pray day and night.”

The liberators intensified their efforts because they were hell-bent
on overthrowing dad. On March 27, 1979, the “liberation” bombs
commonly referred to as “Saba-Saba”, landed on the compounds of the
Republic House at Mengo (Bulange building) and the Army Shop nearby in
the evening. Meanwhile, a cabinet in waiting had been formed by the
Uganda National Liberation Front (UNLF) in Moshi on March 24 and 25,
1979. This cabinet had been formed out of 22 political groups that had
emerged in opposition to dad’s regime.

On March 28, 1979, at about 9am, Lt. Col. Pangarasio Onek, the CO
(commanding officer) of General Headquarters, Mbuya, instructed his
troops to commandeer any available means of transport matatus, trucks,
tractors, cars, taxis, etc, to take their families “home.” My avatar
[my cousin with whom I have done a lot of research on our family],
Yuga Juma Onziga, knew there and then that it was “a game over” for
dad’s regime. Dad’s army was in total disarray and now fighting to
“save their skins.”

The war ended at Lukaya when most of the soldiers and Secret Service
Personnel either said “Congo na gawa” or “Sudan na gawa” or high
tailed it out of the country. Some even said let him fight this out
with his favorite Air Force and Marines – a reminder of the dangers of
favouring particular units in the military over others.

As dad’s army continued to disintegrate, his bombastic propaganda
statements continued on state controlled radio but by now dad knew
better. On March 28, 1979, Radio Uganda claimed that dad had “smashed
through the Tanzanian forces and reopened the road to Entebbe” which
had been closed by the invading forces. The bluff and the bombast that
had served him well for eight years were rapidly losing its effect. As
a consolation, dad was now fighting a private war to evacuate some 80
members of his family and close associates to safety in Libya.

Commissioner urges people to work
Meanwhile the district commissioner of Kampala, Muhammad, addressed a
rally in Kampala where he urged people to turn up for work and
business as usual, yet the rebels were actually 20 miles outside
Entebbe at the time.
On March 28, 1979 at about 4pm, Yuga Juma Onziga along with his wife
and a two-week-old baby girl, his father and brother, fled to Arua.
Between Kiryandongo Hospital and Karuma Falls, the car, a Toyota
matatu they had rented, overturned and some people were injured but
none seriously. The matatu was totally written off and Juma lost his
JVC radio and stereo cassette in this accident.

Fortunately, his younger brother, who was driving later from Kampala
also to Arua, stopped by and conveyed his wife and child along to
Arua. The rest of them transferred to a nearby lorry and arrived in
Arua early in the morning of March 29. They finally converged at their
clan village of Rugbuza later that afternoon. The rest is history!

The same day March 28, 1979,Tanzanian long-range artillery began
bombing Kampala. At about 11:20pm, Radio Uganda broadcast a news flash
saying the attack was close by. “Tonight ... is the first time when
the Tanzanian aggressors with mercenaries and traitors, using
long-range artillery, have bombarded Kampala...” said a newscaster.
This admission of truth by the national radio made Ugandans realise
how close dad’s fall was.

At that time the truth about dad’s impending downfall remained
concealed by the Kampala authorities. However, BBC World Service
regularly intercepted Radio Uganda broadcasts from their monitoring
station at Caversham Park in England. Ugandans who were brave and bold
enough to follow the events at the risk
of being discovered by the notorious State Research Bureau
intelligence agents continued to quietly keep track of BBC broadcasts
and the truth about dad’s impending defeat. They had begun to do so
early in the war.

How we flew to Libya
The day my family flew out of Entebbe to Libya we could hear the
artillery shells in the distance getting closer. It was amazing and
there was a sense of disbelief. Dad was having 60 to 80 seats
installed in a cargo plane for all of us. He was talking to Gaddafi on
the phone, telling him, “My children are coming”. Dad sent us ahead
because he wanted to stay on to make his last stand, even though he
knew that the war was lost.

Apparently, a reluctant Egyptian pilot had to be commandeered and he
was paid cash down in hard currency so that he could accept to fly the
president’s children out of the country to safety. The bombardment was
only 20 miles away then. The Boeing 707 cargo plane had recently come
in from one of its expensive cargo transport flights taking coffee to
the USA and he (the pilot) was very tired. It had no seats whatsoever.

So, some 60 to 80 seats were hurriedly placed in the plane to
accommodate probably 60 persons who were given blankets against the
cold emanating from the bare aluminum floor. I had actually been
hurriedly discharged from Mulago Hospital following a sprain of my
ankle and still had an itchy plaster on.

The Boeing 707 managed to take off under strange circumstances, due to
the fact that artillery shellfire was now raining into the airport
area. It was on the night of March 27! The bodyguards were forced to
place four cars around the plane and they raced down the runway like
lighting for the pilot until we were airborne!
What an uncomfortable ride to safety this was, all the way to Tripoli, Libya!

The plane ride to Tripoli was rough and uncomfortable. I have often
reflected about what could have gone wrong with a plane that had no
seats and was flown by a reluctant Egyptian pilot that had to be
commandeered and paid in hard
currency, before accepting to fly the President’s children out of the
country to safety. I have often wondered what would have happened if
the Egyptian pilot didn’t honour the hefty bribe he received from dad
to fly us out of Uganda to safety but decided not to dwell on the
predicament. Some say it was the fatigue that built the reluctance and
no civilian pilot wants to work under a war situation, which was
understandable under the circumstance.

We left behind some very prized items. I still see in my mind’s eye an
ornate golden Mantle Clock left in my dad’s State House bedroom that
had been given to dad by Tito of Yugoslavia on one of his last state
visits to the Balkans. That visit holds a lot of meaning to me since
dad had promised me that if my grades improved, he would take me on
his next visit abroad. My grades did improve but my brother Lumumba
was chosen on that particular trip and I remember my kid brother
feeding a giraffe in the Belgrade Zoo on a photo shoot with the World
War II hero. I remember asking my stepmother Mama Sarah if she had
remembered to bring the Mantle Clock and she regretted that it had
stayed in State House Entebbe.

Continues next week in Saturday Monitor.
_______________________________________________
WestNileNet mailing list
[email protected]
http://orion.kym.net/mailman/listinfo/westnilenet

WestNileNet is generously hosted by INFOCOM http://www.infocom.co.ug/

The above comments and data are owned by whoever posted them (including 
attachments if any). The List's Host is not responsible for them in any way.
_______________________________________________

Reply via email to