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Ugandan presidential hopeful says police used bullets to disperse supporters

ELIAS BIRYABAREMA 

UGANDAN pop star and presidential hopeful, Bobi Wine, said some of his supporters were injured on Saturday after police fired teargas and live bullets to disperse a crowd in the country’s east.

Wine, whose real name is Robert Kyagulanyi, is seeking to end the 34-year-rule of ageing President Yoweri Museveni in polls due to be held early next year.

Police spokesman Fred Enanga did not reply to Reuters’ repeated calls seeking comment.

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In a post on his Facebook account, Wine said he had travelled to the eastern Ugandan town of Mbale to appear on a radio talk show but that security personnel from both police and the military blocked him.

Police personnel then “started firing teargas and live bullets. Many comrades were injured and are nursing wounds,” he said but did not state the number of supporters injured.

Wine joined politics in 2017 after winning a parliamentary by-election and subsequently declared he would stand for president.

Wine’s candidacy has stirred significant support especially among the country’s youth drawn by his use of music to spotlight rampant rights abuses, corruption and Museveni’s long rule.

His large youth following has rattled the ruling National Resistance Movement (NRM) party and drawn a security crackdown that has included dispersing his rallies with teargas and bullets, beatings and detaining some of his supporters.

At least two of his supporters, including one who was abducted and tortured, have been killed while an allied lawmaker was also once beaten and temporarily blinded.

READ:  Uganda opposition presidential candidate Bobi Wine arrested, police fire teargas at protesters

Wine himself was in 2018 beaten by security forces so badly he had to travel to the United States for treatment.

06Last month the NRM declared Museveni its flag bearer in the forthcoming polls. Should he win another term, he could extend his rule to 40 years, making him one of the longest-serving leaders in Africa. – Thomson Reuters Foundation.



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By The African Mirror

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