[Onthebarricades] Uganda rainforest protests: aftermath, analysis, repression, pics

Andy ldxar1 at tesco.net
Sun Apr 15 14:14:42 PDT 2007


http://www.hindustantimes.com/Redir.aspx?ID=6c23338b-a01f-4d27-852d-7b977d1af3cf&ParentID=c36c9f7b-1f77-4b6f-8c55-f942b56c8e93

Uganda promises Indians security 
 
View More Pictures
Reuters

Indian's killing in Uganda sparks row 
An Indian dies and several Indian establishments were destroyed when a protest by environmentalists turned violent. 
  a.. Uganda support Tharoor's candidature 
Indo-Asian News Service
Kampala/New Delhi, April 13, 2007
First Published: 14:41 IST(13/4/2007)
Last Updated: 02:06 IST(15/4/2007)

Two days after an Indian was killed by a mob protesting an Indian sugar firm's plan to develop part of a protected rainforest, most frightened Indians in the Ugandan capital Saturday stayed indoors despite President Yoweri Museveni assuring them of their safety. 
In New Delhi, Minister of State for External Affairs Anand Sharma said Saturday that India was keeping a close watch on the situation and said that it has taken up the issue of Indians' safety with the Ugandan government. 

The body of Devang Rawal, who was stoned to death by rioters in Kampala, is likely to be flown to his hometown Ahmedabad later Saturday. 

"Uganda Funeral Services is preparing the body to be flown to India," said Rajni Taylor, who heads the Ugandan Indian Association, adding that his employers were supervising the burial arrangements. 

Rawal was working as a sales representative with Translink (U) Ltd, a company importing products of Johnson & Johnson and Nestle products. 

Officials from the Indian High Commission on Thursday evening visited Mulago Hospital mortuary where the body of Rawal was being kept.

"To attack, insult or damage the property of any Ugandan or guests of Uganda is something the government will not tolerate," Museveni said in a statement Friday. 

"I want to assure Ugandans that such hooliganism will not be allowed to happen again, and to warn those that do not want to follow the law they will pay heavily," Museveni added. 

Many Indian-owned shops were closed in Kampala and many Indians decided to stay home and not send their children to school.

Knowing the sensitivity of such attacks and its possible impact on the Ugandan economy in which Indians, mostly traders, play a key role, the police swung into action and has identified those responsible for rioting and looting that hit the city Thursday. 

For Indians living there for generations, Thursday's mob attack that included Indians being dragged off motorbikes and beaten, their shops looted and a Hindu temple attacked, it was an eerie recall of virulent anti-India bashing by former Ugandan dictator Idi Amin who expelled nearly 75,000 Asians in 1972. 

The rioting mob was protesting the move by The Sugar Corporation of Uganda Limited (SCOUL), part of the Indian-owned Mehta group, to expand its sugar estates by cutting the Mabira rain forest- one of Uganda's last remaining patches of natural forest. It has been a nature reserve since 1932.

Troops had to be deployed to control the situation, after police failed to stop rioters attacking Asian businesses.

Shangu Patel of the Indian Association went around the city Friday encouraging Asians to reopen their shops but his efforts were met with scepticism, the online edition of New Vision reported.

"How can we be very sure that there will be no repeat?" asked a local Indian shopkeeper.

The controversy began last year when the Ugandan government ordered a study whether to cut down nearly a third of Mabira- one of Uganda's last remaining patches of natural forest. 

The government's proposal had angered many in the country who alleged that the environmental costs of slashing the forest would far exceed the economic benefits of the plantation.

Until 1972, Asians constituted the largest non-indigenous ethnic group in Uganda.

http://news.monstersandcritics.com/africa/news/article_1291348.php/Ugandan_Asians_resume_business_two_days_after_racist_riots

Africa News
Ugandan Asians resume business two days after racist riots
Apr 14, 2007, 11:35 GMT 


Kampala - Ethnic Asians in the Ugandan capital Kampala reopened their businesses on Saturday, two days after a racist riot targeting members of the Asian community left three people dead including an Indian. 


A demonstration mounted in the city on Thursday by environmental groups protesting against a government plan to give thousands of acres of a forest reserve for an expansion of an Asian-owned sugar plantation, instead turned against the Asians, mostly Indians owning shops in the city. 

Demonstrators attacked members of the Asian community, stoning them and looting shops. Three people were killed including an Indian while eight others were injured. The scared Asians closed their premises and had since then sought police protection. 

'On Friday night, we had a meeting with the minister of security, the minister of internal affairs and the inspector general of police and they assured us of security,' Parminder Singh, a member of the 14,000-strong Indian Association, told Deutsche Presse-Agentur dpa on Saturday. 

'They told us to resume work,' he added. 

'We have been talking to our people and assuring them that they will be safe. 250 members of the Asian community attended the meeting. They understood the problem. We told them that incidents like this happen in life and that you cannot stay angry for ever,' Singh said by telephone. 

Asian business premises, mostly dealing in electronics, pharmaceuticals, textiles and building materials had been padlocked since Thursday but many were open by Saturday morning. 

Heavily armed police and military personnel were however still patrolling the streets in downtown Kampala and in the suburbs. 

The attacks on the Asians were the bloodiest since 1972, the year when former Ugandan military dictator Idi Amin ordered a mass expulsion of over 75,000 Asians, mostly of Indian and Pakistan descent, who dominated the country's merchant and business class. 

The country was then plunged into economic chaos as businesses and shops closed. 

http://www.dnaindia.com/report.asp?NewsID=1091034

Asians in Uganda fleeing to Kenya
Agencies 
Sunday, April 15, 2007  23:16 IST

KAMPALA: Many Asians, including several Indians, have reportedly fled Uganda to Kenya through Busia on the Uganda-Kenya border post while scores sought refuge at the Central Police Station,  fearing renewed racial attacks against them.
Asian businessmen in Kampala, who had closed their businesses after Thursday's attacks, agreed to reopen their shops following assurance by the authorities. However, they were still sceptical about their safety.
Police stepped up security around properties owned by the Indians and their temples. An Indian national Devang Rawal (24), was stoned to death by violent mobs on Thursday which attacked the properties owned by Asians. They were protesting against the bid by a local sugar company, SCOUL, which is part of the Indian-owned Mehta Group, for the Mabira Forest Reserve to expand its estate. 
Rawal who tried to flee the mob on a motorcycle, was intercepted, pulled down and stoned to death.  "Rawal was riding a motorcycle when he was stoned at clocktower. He died on his way to Mulago hospital,'" Kampala Police Spokesman Simeo Neubuqa said. 
Officials from the Indian High Commission on Thursday visited Mulago Hospital mortuary where the body of the deceased was kept. Rawal was working as a sales representative with Translink (U) Ltd.  A Swami Narayan Temple and a branch of the Bank of Baroda was damaged in the violent demonstrations. Many shops were attacked and cars burnt.

http://www.earthtimes.org/articles/show/51825.html

      Uganda promises Indians security, Indians still scared  
     


Kampala/New Delhi, April 14 Two days after an Indian was killed by a mob protesting an Indian sugar firm's plan to develop part of a protected rainforest, most frightened Indians in the Ugandan capital Saturday stayed indoors despite President Yoweri Museveni assuring them of their safety. 


In New Delhi, Minister of State for External Affairs Anand Sharma said Saturday that India was keeping a close watch on the situation and said that it has taken up the issue of Indians' safety with the Ugandan government. 


The body of Devang Rawal, who was stoned to death by rioters in Kampala, is likely to be flown to his hometown Ahmedabad later Saturday. 


'Uganda Funeral Services is preparing the body to be flown to India,' said Rajni Taylor, who heads the Ugandan Indian Association, adding that his employers were supervising the burial arrangements. 


Rawal was working as a sales representative with Translink (U) Ltd, a company importing products of Johnson & Johnson and Nestle products. 


Officials from the Indian High Commission on Thursday evening visited Mulago Hospital mortuary where the body of Rawal was being kept. 


'To attack, insult or damage the property of any Ugandan or guests of Uganda is something the government will not tolerate,' Museveni said in a statement Friday. 


'I want to assure Ugandans that such hooliganism will not be allowed to happen again, and to warn those that do not want to follow the law they will pay heavily,' Museveni added. 


Many Indian-owned shops were closed in Kampala and many Indians decided to stay home and not send their children to school. 


Knowing the sensitivity of such attacks and its possible impact on the Ugandan economy in which Indians, mostly traders, play a key role, the police swung into action and has identified those responsible for rioting and looting that hit the city Thursday. 


For Indians living there for generations, Thursday's mob attack that included Indians being dragged off motorbikes and beaten, their shops looted and a Hindu temple attacked, it was an eerie recall of virulent anti-India bashing by former Ugandan dictator Idi Amin who expelled nearly 75,000 Asians in 1972. 


The rioting mob was protesting the move by The Sugar Corporation of Uganda Limited (SCOUL), part of the Indian-owned Mehta group, to expand its sugar estates by cutting the Mabira rain forest- one of Uganda's last remaining patches of natural forest. It has been a nature reserve since 1932.

http://www.monitor.co.ug/oped/oped04162.php

      Facing the facts on Mabira , Scoul and Museveni  
      April 16, 2007 
      Dear Tingasiga:

      The tragedy of the violence and murder that marred last Thursday's peaceful demonstration against President Yoweri T. Museveni's plan to sale Mabira Forest to the Mehta Group of Companies was worsened by the president's decision to politicise what was obviously a case of criminal hooliganism. 

      In a statement issued after the murder of three people and the injury of scores more, President Museveni claimed that these were acts of the political opposition groups, an attempt to divert the world's attention from the widespread opposition to his foolhardy plan to destroy one of the country's most precious assets. 

      By politically exploiting this tragedy, Museveni betrayed an arrogant disregard for the sensitivities of the bereaved families and the frustration felt by Ugandans and other world citizens at the deafness of the Ugandan president. 

      Clearly, the fools who engaged in primitive violence did not understand the purpose of the Save Mabira demonstration. They had no clue about the real economic forces and power brokers behind the Museveni-Mehta deal. And they could not have possessed the most rudimentary knowledge of what any of the major political parties in Uganda stood for. They were hooligans simply hitching a ride on a serious demonstration by serious advocates for environmental protection. 

      If I were Mr Museveni, I would abandon the tired routine of blaming the political opposition for everything that goes wrong in the country. Instead I would reflect on the possible reasons why some of the demonstrators turned on Asians with such deadly results. 

      One reason may be that the attack on the Asians was in fact an attack on Mr Museveni and the boss of the Mehta Group, both of whom were beyond the physical reach of the angry mob. 

      Museveni's actions and rhetoric over recent years have created resentment towards foreign businessmen, mostly of Asian origin. He has vigorously promoted policies that have favoured foreign business interests, even as he has dismissed and abused the rights and arguments of fellow Ugandans. He appears to care more about the economic and security wellbeing of foreign investors than the welfare and human rights of Ugandans. Frankly, those who accuse Museveni of behaving like a Nyampara [foreman] on the payroll of multinationals may not be off the mark. 

      To President Museveni, the executives of the Sugar Corporation of Uganda Limited [Scoul], a subsidiary of the Mehta Group of Companies, and others to whom he is handing choice real estate and other public assets are the real stakeholders in Uganda, not the 28 million citizens who call Uganda home. 

      It is not surprising that Ugandans are fighting back. Unfortunately, some of the frustrated citizens, propelled by the universal problem of raw ethnic and racial prejudice, have reacted with resentment towards the Asians, the recipients of the president's favour. 

      For their part, leading Asian businessmen have associated themselves with the president and his corrupt regime. They have financed the president's campaigns for election and re-election in 1996, 2001 and 2006 . The national treasurer of the ruling National Resistance Movement Organisation party is an Asian. While none of this is illegal, it suggests that the lessons of 1972 have probably been forgotten. The deep-seated anti-Asian feeling was reflected in the euphoria that greeted Gen. Idi Amin's expulsion of Asians from Uganda. 

      The politically correct thing is to condemn the perpetrators of last week's violence and to lecture them about the evils of racism. But the honest citizen is one who condemns the violence but acknowledges the terrible reality that anti-Asian racism is as alive and well in Uganda as it was 35 years ago. 

      The challenge for the Asians in Uganda, whether citizens or foreigners, is to examine their individual and group behaviour in a country that is steeped in deep economic disparity, with the Asians, a tiny minority, sitting at the top of the economic pyramid. 

      Without surrendering their basic human rights, the Asians are well advised to side with the people of Uganda in the current struggle for justice. A decision to remain aloof or to cozy up to Museveni's repressive and arrogant regime will not guarantee them the safety they rightly crave.

      Of course the rest of us have a duty to educate our fellow countrymen that the people to fight over Mabira are not the Asian migrant workers who are simply doing their Kyeyo (migrnat labour) in Uganda. It is not the foreign Asian businessmen or Asian-Ugandans who have as much right to live and work in Uganda as any Mukasa, Mugisha or Mundua. 
      The people to fight, using our intellect and ability to mobilise international opinion, are the top executives of Scoul who are stubbornly pushing an agenda to feed their greed and short-sightedness. 

      But the person who deserves the strongest condemnation is President Museveni whose reckless agenda to destroy the country's greenbelt in the name of modernisation will be his worst legacy. 

      Contact: mkmulera at aol.com
     


http://www.eastandard.net/hm_news/news_s.php?articleid=1143967337

      Museveni stalking the old embers of violence 
     


Because of its remoteness we can easily dismiss the Friday confrontation in Uganda sparked by excision of Mabira rainforest as an external problem.
We could argue the crisis, ignited by President Museveni's decision to give away 7,100 of 31,000 hectares of prime rain forest, to an Indian-run sugar firm for sugarcane plantation, is localised. 
We could also delude ourselves it matters not what Uganda's court ruled in 2004. The court concluded the change of land use, by way of allocation to Kakira Sugar Works for sugarcane cultivation, violated the Constitution.
It is also tempting to say before we talk about the Mabira fiasco, we should first remove the log in our eyes, by way of cleaning up the mess in Mt Elgon District, healing the gaping wounds in the hearts of its people, protecting local water masses, and enforcing peace.
It could rightly, barring the fact the spirit of East African Community envisages collapsible borders and integrated economy, be said Mabira is a drop in the ocean compared to such weighty matters afflicting Kenya.
Top on the list would be our political polarity, inter, and intra-party anarchy, economic haemorrhage, corruption, and the gushing wounds of ethnic hate.
Cynics are also bound to argue that given Uganda's bloodletting history, Mabira is pinhead among the country's problems. But the reverse is also true. Uganda currently enjoys relative peace, except in the North where the National Resistance Movement and the Lords Resistance Army play deadly games with guns, all it could need is a flicker that could take that country back to the dark ages.
It should not be forgotten that though relatively peaceful, Uganda has shed so much blood, particularly during the ruinous reign of Africa's villainous dictator, Idi Amin Dada. There was then the infamous forced Asian exodus of the 1970s, during which Amin's insatiable bloodhounds took over their businesses. And in the process, because of the chaotic takeover, torpedoed the nation to the dunk-heap of pillaged economies.
That is why the latest violence against Asians, and the looming fear the isolation and violence against this minority could snowball must be discouraged.
It does not help matters that some of the protesters chillingly declared it was not beyond Uganda's resourcefulness to produce another Amin. Surely, Africa deserves better, including Ugandans. Such statements are contemptuous of the African spirit and brotherliness. 
Uganda, it should be remembered, despite the bravado posturing of its leadership, is not yet out of the woods. There are areas where illegal arms reign supreme. To the North, according to the United Nations, there are about 1.6 internally displaced people crammed in refugee camps. In the same breath the UN estimates that 1,000 Ugandans die every week in this corner. 
Besides the fear that the attack on Asians could be replicated outside Uganda, to detrimental consequences by way of irrepressible upheaval and violation of human rights, it is important to make peace now. But listening to President Museveni emerges the picture of a leader not so keen on negotiation. 
The claim by environmentalists that the excision would cause serious environmental consequences sounds hollow to Museveni whose eyes are riveted onto the economic gain of processing. "I shall not be deterred by people who don't see where the future of Africa lies," he said.
No matter who is right or wrong, peace has to be given a chance and dialogue is the key. The region is watching how Uganda settles this conflict.

http://www.monitor.co.ug/oped/oped04161.php

Editorial | April 16, 2007



Mabira Forest: Just do the right thing 

It is a good thing that President Yoweri Museveni told worried veterans in Kiboga that nothing has been decided on the Mabira matter. How much better would it be if the president stopped sending mixed signals to the public on this touchy issue which has already cost the lives of three people? It is not enough for the president to change his tone as and when it suits a particular audience considering that just a few days earlier he had been rather abrasive.
Now then, since this issue still has to be discussed in Cabinet and Parliament, what better opportunity than now to urge the president and MPs to simply do the right thing - abandon any thoughts of degazetting Mabira. Those who have been entrusted wield power by the people must take into serious consideration the agitation this emotive issue continues to generate. 
They must ask the following questions: Is the clearly reckless intention to give away Mabira forest to an investor whose management credentials have already been brought into question worth the loss of life and social unrest? Is the expected damage to the environment, our ecosystems and climate worth the purported increase in sugarcane production? 
Is it sensible and worth all the trouble to split the country between the very, very tiny minority who wish to destroy this vital rainforest and the rest of the 28 million Ugandans who have rejected this dangerous attack on our environment? 
These are some of the key questions that the Cabinet and Parliament must address when considering this straightforward matter. The two bodies should be advised that from what has occurred and continues to occur in the public domain, only one decision will be considered correct - rebuffing Mehta.
Ugandans appear to have transcended the parochial political point-scoring that many of our politicians might be prone to and instead looked at the national interest in all its gravity. President Museveni reportedly made the interesting point that political opportunists were hijacking the campaign to save Mabira when he met the veterans. It should equally interest the government to know that Ugandans can clear see through politics .
As we urge all Ugandans to remain steadfast in their opposition to degazetting Mabira, and as we again condemn the xenophobic attacks on members of the Asian community by certain rascals who took advantage of last Thursday peaceful demonstration, we take this opportunity to recognise the Asian community's sensible decision to reprimand Mehta over Mabira. 

http://www.newvision.co.ug/D/8/14/559696

      Racial violence unforgivable 
      Friday, 13th April, 2007  E-mail article    Print article 
     
      THE violence against the Asian community, resulting in one Asian killed is unforgivable. It has led to the loss of life and the destruction of property of innocent people. It has diverted a noble cause into a racial one. 

      And it has allowed a genuine environmental concern to be hijacked by thugs and violent racists. 

      The finger-pointing of who is responsible has already started. Surely, the organisers carry a responsibility. They should have warned and acted against racist slogans displayed on placards. Banners saying 'Asians should go' or 'For every tree cut, five Indians dead' clearly and directly targeted people solely for belonging to a particular group - the definition of genocide. 

      Irresponsible politicians who incited rather than calmed down the crowds are also to blame. The fact that some MPs attempted to defy Police instructions by marching onto Kampala Road, forcing the Police to use teargas, unnecessarily stirred up emotions. 

      Threatening statements by FDC shadow minister for environment, Beatrice Anywar Atim, were contributing factors. "We are warning Mehta that they should just withdraw their interest in the forest, otherwise we shall cut them before they cut the trees," she said during a press conference at Parliament on Thursday. 

      It is too soon for Ugandans to have forgotten what happened next door, in Rwanda, when one million Tutsis were slaughtered in just 100 days. 

      It is wrong to blame one person's action on a group, because not every member of that group would necessarily subscribe to that individual's beliefs. The head of the Indian community in Uganda even says their position is that Mabira forest should not be given to Mehta. So why target Indians? 

      The debate on Mabira Forest is a healthy one. It is a debate about environment versus development - and ultimately about striking a balance between the two. It is unfortunate that some people, for political, racial or economic reasons, allowed this cause to be betrayed. 

     


http://www.indiaenews.com/africa/20070415/47449.htm

Suspected killers of an Indian arrested in Uganda
>From correspondents in Africa, 07:34 PM IST
The Ugandan police have arrested four people on suspicion of killing an Indian during Thursday's violent protests over a proposed forest giveaway.

Deval Rawal, a 24-year-old Indian in Uganda, was beaten to death in downtown Kampala, when a peaceful demonstration turned into a riot over the proposed giveaway of Mabira forest to an Indian-run sugar plant for sugarcane plantation.

At least 21 protesters including four suspects related to the murder have been arrested.

'We arrested them on Friday night after video footage and photos showed them performing the grisly act,' a senior police source was quoted by Sunday Vision as saying. 'They admitted that they battered Rawal to death.'

The suspects are being detained at Kampala's Central Police Station.

Some of those arrested during and immediately after the riots have been released after video recordings showed they were not involved in the violence.

'During the riots we picked people left and right. The number we are giving you now are people who are in detention with specific charges,' said Edward Ochom, Kampala Extra Police Chief, adding that the Police had intensified the hunt for the perpetrators.

'Anybody who was involved, whether by breaking into shops, stealing motorcycles, inciting the masses or planning violence will be arrested,' he said.

Those detained are due to appear in court on Monday to face charges of murder, destruction and inciting violence.

There were signs of confidence returning as some businessmen reopened their shops and banks Saturday.

Representatives of the Indian community decided to reopen their businesses after Security Minister Amama Mbabazi and Police Chief Maj. Gen. Kale Kayihura convinced them Friday about their safety.

Following Rawal's death, the Indian community had threatened to go on a two-week strike through closure of all their businesses, including schools and hospitals. They also wanted to refuse paying taxes as a way of expressing their displeasure.

The plan was, however, dropped after MP Tanna Singh and Kampala City Council Councillor Pradip Karia intervened.

http://www.newvision.co.ug/D/8/12/559701

      Police arrest Mabira demo leaders  
      Friday, 13th April, 2007  E-mail article    Print article 
     
              
            Musisi, Ssaka and Ahimbisibwe plead innocence after their arrest over the theft of motorbikes
           

      By Charles Etukuri 
      And Steven Candia 

      THE Vice-President of the Uganda Young Democrats, Fred Mukasa Mbidde, and the Chairman of Kampala City Traders Association (KACITA), Issa Ssekito, were arrested yesterday in connection with Thursday's riots and are to be charged with murder, the Police announced. 

      The two were picked up on Friday morning and were being interrogated most of the day at the Kampala Central Police Station. Efforts to have them charged failed as the Buganda Road court had already closed. 

      "They have been arrested and when we got them to court, it was too late. So they are appearing on Monday on murder charges," Kampala Police chief Edward Ochom told The New Vision. 
      Last evening, the LC1 chairman of Makerere Kivuli, Badru Bwanika, joined the two others. He also faces charges of murder. 

      The Police have vowed to pursue and arrest whoever was involved in the violence, irrespective of their positions or social standing. 

      They singled out some MPs, especially from the opposition, for organising and inciting the public. The politicians, the Police said, had stirred up public sentiments against the Asian community, especially Indians, which culminated in the violence in which one person was stoned and beaten to death and several others were injured. 

      A top level police committee, headed by deputy director of CID Okoth Ochola, was formed to investigate the events. 

      In addition, the Police summoned by telephone nine politicians, among them Kampala Central MP Erias Lukwago and Kitgum Woman MP Beatrice Atim Anywar. 

      Lukwago confirmed they had been called but he said that as MPs, they could only be summoned through the speaker of parliament. 

      Meanwhile, some of the property looted during the riots has been recovered. The Katwe Police displayed 11 out of 12 motorcycles stolen from Leader Uganda Ltd. stores in Katwe Wansi, owned by a Chinese national. 

      "We have the motorcycles and arrested three people," Katwe CID chief, Cosmas Ruganzu, said. 

      The Police identified the three suspects as Geoffrey Musisi, Richard Saka and Alias Ahimbisibwe. 

      Earlier on Friday, security in Kampala city and in Lugazi town, where the Mehta sugar factory is located, had been stepped up. The Democratic Party had planned an unauthorised demonstration at Mabira Forest but the plan flopped. 

      Heavily armed policemen, backed by military police and the UPDF, were seen patrolling the area around the Mehta sugar cane plantations. The gates leading to the SCOUL sugar factory were tightly guarded by police and Special Police Constables, and everyone entering was subjected to a thorough search.
     



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