Uganda police arrest Bobi Wine after presidential nomination
 
 
Ugandan police on Tuesday again arrested Bobi Wine,
a popular singer and opposition presidential hopeful, just after he was
successfully certified as a candidate in next year's election.
Wine, who is bidding to unseat Uganda’s long-time
leader, was dragged from his car by police. The local NBS Television, reporting
from the scene, said the singer, whose real name is Kyagulanyi Ssentamu, was
put into a police van amid violent scuffles between police and his supporters.
A police spokesman did not immediately respond to
questions. Authorities frequently accuse Wine of planning rallies that could
disrupt public order, which he denies.
Critics say President Yoweri Museveni, in power
since 1986, increasingly depends on the armed forces to assert his authority.
Museveni, who was nominated as a candidate on
Monday, said afterward that his government would not tolerate the activities of
enemies he did not name who are allegedly plotting chaos.
“There's nobody who is going to disturb here.
Whoever tries will regret. Because for us, we don't play," the president
said. “The (ruling party) fought to bring peace in this country. Nobody has
more guns than us. But we don't scare people.”
After Wine's arrest, there were skirmishes between
his supporters and police outside his home on the outskirts of Kampala, the
capital, and police fired tear gas into the property, according to Joel
Ssenyonyi, a spokesman for Wine's People Power movement.
“There are running battles,” Ssenyonyi said
from inside Wine's gated home, adding that the candidate's whereabouts remained
unknown. “It's quite chaotic.”
Wine, 38, has captured the imagination of many
Ugandans with his persistent calls for the 76-year-old Museveni to retire. He
is especially popular with poor people in urban areas.
“We now enter the most critical phase of our
liberation struggle!” Wine tweeted after having his candidacy certified.
The electoral commission has not fixed a date for
the polls.
Wine and other opposition leaders have been
frequently arrested in recent years, sometimes detained within their own homes
by police citing a need to prevent crimes from being committed.
Those actions have reinforced a view among some
Ugandans that the police serve at the behest of Museveni, who has rebuffed
repeated calls to retire peacefully.
This East African country has never witnessed a
peaceful transfer of power since independence from British colonial rule in
1962.
 
          
     
                                
 
 


