Uganda's main opposition leader Kizza Besigye (centre) is escorted by police officers to a police vehicle on February 22, 2016 in Kampala. AFP PHOTO | ISAAC KASAMANI
Summary
- Kizza Besigye, who came second in the February 18 presidential poll, was detained as he greeted supporters in the central Kampala.
- A long-standing opponent of Museveni, Besigye has been frequently jailed, placed under house arrest, accused of both treason and rape, tear-gassed, beaten and hospitalised over the years.
- Museveni, who seized power in 1986, is one of Africa's longest serving leaders.
Kizza
Besigye, who came second in the February 18 presidential poll, was
detained as he greeted supporters in the central Kampala, on a surprise
public appearance in the capital, which is an opposition stronghold.
A video surfaced online appearing to show the Dr Besigye being sworn in as president.
"Yes,
he was in town but we have taken him to Naggalama police station where
he will be detained," city police spokesman Patrick Onyango told AFP, referring to a location some 20 kilometres (12 miles) east of Kampala.
He did not say on what charges Besigye was being held.
A
long-standing opponent of Museveni, Besigye has been frequently jailed,
placed under house arrest, accused of both treason and rape,
tear-gassed, beaten and hospitalised over the years.
Museveni,
who has been in power for three decades, was declared winner of the
February poll with 61 percent of the vote and has rejected claims his
victory was won through cheating and fraud.
But
Besigye denounced the vote "the most fradulent electoral process" and
international observers said it was carried out in an "atmosphere of
intimidation" by the regime.
In a posting on
Twitter, Besigye's Forum for Democratic Change (FDC) said that just
before his arrest, he had been sworn in as president in an alternative
ceremony.
His arrest came just 24 hours before
Museveni was to be sworn in at a ceremony which will be attended by more
than a dozen African heads of state, among them South African President
Jacob Zuma, Zimbabwe's Robert Mugabe and Paul Kagame of Rwanda.
The arrest drew a sharp rebuke from London-based rights group Amnesty International.
"President
Museveni's inauguration comes amidst a crackdown on the rights to the
freedom of expression, association and assembly," said Muthoni Wanyeki,
Amnesty's Director for East Africa, the Horn and the Great Lakes.
The
arbitrary detention of opposition figures and supporters, the ban on TV
coverage of their events, and the violent disruption of their
gatherings were a violation of Uganda's constitution "but also fly in
the face of its regional and international human rights obligations," he
said.
Museveni, who seized power in 1986, is
one of Africa's longest serving leaders, after Equatorial Guinea's
President Theodore Obiang Nguema, Angola's Jose Eduardo Dos Santos,
Zimbabwe's Mugabe and Cameroon's Paul Biya.
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