The US ambassador to Uganda, Martin Brennan, said this week that the human rights situation in the country had significantly improved, but that his country was still concerned by flaws in the electoral process, together with political intimidation, according to the government-owned New Vision newspaper.
UGANDA: US concerned by restricted political activity
NAIROBI, 15 March (IRIN) - The US ambassador to Uganda, Martin Brennan,
said this week that the human rights situation in the country had
significantly improved, but that his country was still concerned by flaws
in the electoral process, together with political intimidation, according
to the government-owned New Vision newspaper.
"In Uganda now, you are able to do things you wouldn't do before. Things
have improved tremendously," the paper quoted Brennan as saying, during
the hand-over of the US State Department's 2001 country report to Margaret
Sekaggya, chairwoman of the Uganda Human Rights Commission (UHRC).
The US report itself painted a somewhat darker picture of the situation
than Brennan, saying that Uganda's rights record generally remained poor
throughout 2001, due to restrictions on political activity. These were
highlighted during the presidential elections in March (when President
Yoweri Museveni won a second and final five-year term) and parliamentary
elections in June, as a result of which the president's National
Resistance Movement (NRM) retained its hold on power, it said.
Under Museveni's "no-party system", political parties are banned from
holding national conventions, endorsing candidates, issuing platforms or
opening offices outside the capital. Instead, all political activity being
restricted to the confines of the Movement system, with every Ugandan
adult ostensibly an NRM member.
The US also expressed concern over the level of general insecurity which
persisted in different parts of country last year.
Although observers believed the results of the presidential and
parliamentary elections reflected the general will of the people, both
were "marred seriously" - particularly in the days leading up to the
elections - by limited space for political party activities, incidences of
violence, intimidation, fraud and electoral irregularities that led to a
flawed electoral process, according to the State Department.
"There were credible reports from opposition candidates that security
personnel, including UPDF [Uganda People's Defence Forces] soldiers,
intimidated them and disrupted their rallies and that local government
officials deliberately obstructed opposition political events," its
26-page report stated.
The Ugandan government generally respected the freedom of speech and of
the press, but there were also some instances in which it infringed those
rights, it said.
"The government restricted the freedom of assembly and association, and
the constitutional restrictions on political activity effectively
continued to limit these rights. However, political parties continued
operating with fewer restrictions," it added.
Both government security forces and insurgent forces committed serious
human rights abuses during 2001, according to the State Department.
Although there were no confirmed reports of politically motivated killings
by government forces during the election period, members of the security
forces and the police sometimes used excessive force and committed a
number of extrajudicial killings, it said.
In the course of their operations, state and paramilitary security forces
(including the Directorate of Military Intelligence) sometimes arbitrarily
arrested and detained civilians, including opposition politicians and
their supporters, it stated.
"Despite measures to improve on the discipline and training of the forces,
and despite the punishment of some security force officials guilty of
abuses, abuses by the state security forces sometimes resulted in deaths
and remained a problem throughout the country," it added.
The killing and abduction of civilians, including children, by the
insurgent Allied Democratic Forces (ADF) in the west of the country
decreased during 2001, the US reported. The Lord's Resistance Army (LRA) -
which Washington has listed, along with the ADF, as a terrorist
organisation - continued to attack civilians from its bases in southern
Sudan, but the attacks waned during the year due to decreasing support
from Sudan, it added.
General insecurity had increased in northeastern Uganda in 2001, with
warriors from the Karamojong pastoralist community in Moroto and Kotido
districts mounting raids, mainly in neighbouring Katakwi. There were also
reports of Karamojong warriors continuing a practice by which they claim
unmarried women as wives by abducting and raping them, the report said.
Besides insecurity, incidences of vigilante justice increased and were
reported daily throughout the year; domestic violence, rape and child
abuse also remained a serious concern, the report added.
While the State Department document focused mostly on human rights
concerns, US Ambassador Martin Brennan cautioned that it was just a
chronicle of events, suggesting that the context and trend of human rights
were two different matters. "The assessment of whether the glass is
half-empty or half-full is often a judgement call," The New Vision quoted
him as saying.
In a separate development, the UHRC has urged Museveni's government to
intensify its efforts towards strengthening relations with Sudan, as a key
element in improving the security and human rights situation in northern
Uganda. "The government should intensify efforts to strengthen relations
between Sudan and Uganda, which will hopefully deny the LRA a base for
retreat after attacks on Uganda," the Commission's 2001 report stated.
Ugandan troops have recently moved inside Sudan in pursuit of LRA rebels,
and with the public blessing of the Sudanese government, after LRA
incursions into Apac, Gulu and Kitgum districts.
[ENDS]
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