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Torture Images Spark Anger Against Ugandan Police

Torture Images Spark Anger Against Ugandan Police
Torture Images Spark Anger Against Ugandan Police

Ugandan rights activists say grisly images of the torture of a detained politician showing septic wounds on his body highlight the escalating brutality and impunity of the country’s security personnel.

Pictures began circulating online and in local media on Thursday of Geoffrey Byamukama, mayor of a small town in western Uganda, lying on a hospital bed with gaping wounds on his swollen knees and ankles, and bruises elsewhere on his body, Aljazeera reported.

Eric Rugira—a friend of Byamukama who visited him in the hospital where he is being treated and held—said Byamukama had told him the wounds came from “hours of torture” at the hands of police shortly after his arrest.

The images of Byamukama have elicited widespread anger and denunciation from Ugandans on social media. He was arrested on April 5 on suspicion he had participated in the murder of a senior police official, Andrew Felix Kaweesi, on March 17.

Security services deny accusations of using torture to wring confessions from suspects.

President Yoweri Museveni, 72, has often expressed support for his top police boss, whom he has praised for helping contain protests against his government.

Police Spokesman Asan Kasingye said two security personnel had been arrested in connection with Byamukama’s torture but gave no further details.

“We do not condone torture ... It is not our method of work,” he told Reuters. Sarah Birete, program director at the Center for Constitutional Governance, disagreed.

“Torture to get information from suspects is the standard now and we are yet to see more. This is typical in an illegitimate regime where impunity reigns,” she said, adding police have also been accused of kidnappings and robberies.

A total of 22 suspects have so far been charged in connection with Kaweesi’s murder, although Byamukama was not among those charged. Some have appeared in court shirtless, their bodies also showing what appeared to be torture marks.

Some government critics have pointed to rivalry among various top security officials and said the murder was possibly an assassination by Kaweesi’s enemies within the police.

Museveni, in power since 1986, won reelection last year in a disputed poll that several international observers said lacked credibility and transparency.

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