Armed police raided and closed down The RedPepper, a tabloid,
Uganda's largest independent newspaper, The Daily Monitor, and its
sister radios, KFM and Dembe FM, following reports that the President
was grooming his son, Brig. Muhoozi Kainerugaba, to succeed him.
At the Namuwongo-based Monitor Publications Limited (MPL), which
Preident Yoweri Museveni has in the past severally referred to as 'that
enemy paper', police officers, some in uniform and others in plain
clothes arrived in three vans, stormed and sealed off the premises.
The police claimed they were searching for a leaked letter General
David Sejusa (Tinyefuza) containing allegations of a ploy to eliminate
those against plans by President Yoweri Museveni, to have his son
succeed him also referred to as the 'Muhoozi Project'.
Workers could not be allowed to move out as the police ransacked
everything from the production plant to the newspaper's printing press
that they later switched off before their electricians disconnected
electricity, leaving the entire premises in darkness.
The police also attempted to shutdown the publication's website and
failed. Ronnie Muyimba, The Daily Monitor's Digital and Technical
Manager, told The Independent that one of the police officers found him
editing web content and asked him where the computers with internet were
before ordering him to shutdown the computers.
"When I told him [police officer] computers are not forcefully
closed," Muyimba said, "he said if I wanted force he could use force.
Then he forcefully pulled out the power cables out of the computer."
The officer was then overheard confirming to his bosses that he had
disconnected everything. But Muyimba told The Independent that the
website was still up and running and that they would keep posting the
stories.
"It is particularly perturbing that the police ordered our operations
shut down under the pretext of carrying out a search. It is
unacceptable that our business should be crippled on a dispute which
should be settled in court," said Alex Asiimwe, the MPL Managing
Director.
On the outskirts of the city at Namanve, about 10 Km from Kampala,
armed police had also descended on Uganda's leading tabloid and closed
it down too. Both newspapers could not publish on May 21 and neither
will they do so the following day, sources said the police was still at
the premises and denied journalists access.
"All four are important sources of information for many Ugandans
whose right to receive information has been violated by the police
action," noted ACME, a Kampala-based independent, non-profit
organization that trains organisation.
The Red pepper, Chief Executive Officer (CEO), Richard Tusiime said:
"We are saddened and disappointed that despite us complying with the
court's request, the police have refused to vacate our premises and to
allow us to carry on with our work. They insist that they are carrying
out more searches for documents which they neither told us nor the
magistrate who gave them the search warrant."
Tusiime, who said they had handed over to the police a copy of a
press release received from Sejusa's lawyers and published in The Red
Pepper, citing government sources, noted that the police's raid was not
about the Sejusa letter but a long term plan orchestrated to cripple Red
Pepper economically and disable its capacity to do any more business in
Uganda.
"We have been informed that the plan is to
keep our offices closed for as long as they like, dismantle our new
printing press, destroy our computers and servers by installing
malicious malware and then hand over the junk when they are satisfied
that we have been taken back to the stone age," he added.
Tusiime recalled a similar incident in 2008 when men with guns, dressed in military uniform and riding government pick-up trucks bombed "this same printing press and burnt it down."
Meanwhile, police insisted they were acting within the law and said they would continue with the search until they find the documents. Information Minister, Mary Karooro Okurut also justified the raid citing 'national security'.
"... the police is working within the parameters of the law, specifically, section 37 of the Penal Code which bars the publication of information prejudicial to national security, Okurut said in a statement, "The Police went through the due legal process and secured a court order - which was issued by a court of competent jurisdiction (Nakawa Chief Magistrates Court).
However, Okurut and the police ignored the fact The Monitor lawyers appealed.
"This matter is in court and management has contested the demand by the police for us to disclose the source of the story, and the matter is yet to be decided," Asiimwe, said.
ACME said "the police action, itself a blatant disregard of court process and therefore rule of law appears to be meant to send a signal to the Ugandan media and the public that critical reporting and commentary on sensitive affairs of government will not be tolerated."
Apart from ACME, the East and Horn of Africa Human Rights Defenders (EHAHRDP) the Foundation for Human Rights Initiative (FHRI) and the Human Rights Watch (HRW) have all criticised the government for the crackdown on the media.
"The Ugandan government should immediately end politically motivated police intimidation of newspapers and radio stations and ensure that the media can operate freely," HRW said.
Tusiime recalled a similar incident in 2008 when men with guns, dressed in military uniform and riding government pick-up trucks bombed "this same printing press and burnt it down."
Meanwhile, police insisted they were acting within the law and said they would continue with the search until they find the documents. Information Minister, Mary Karooro Okurut also justified the raid citing 'national security'.
"... the police is working within the parameters of the law, specifically, section 37 of the Penal Code which bars the publication of information prejudicial to national security, Okurut said in a statement, "The Police went through the due legal process and secured a court order - which was issued by a court of competent jurisdiction (Nakawa Chief Magistrates Court).
However, Okurut and the police ignored the fact The Monitor lawyers appealed.
"This matter is in court and management has contested the demand by the police for us to disclose the source of the story, and the matter is yet to be decided," Asiimwe, said.
ACME said "the police action, itself a blatant disregard of court process and therefore rule of law appears to be meant to send a signal to the Ugandan media and the public that critical reporting and commentary on sensitive affairs of government will not be tolerated."
Apart from ACME, the East and Horn of Africa Human Rights Defenders (EHAHRDP) the Foundation for Human Rights Initiative (FHRI) and the Human Rights Watch (HRW) have all criticised the government for the crackdown on the media.
"The Ugandan government should immediately end politically motivated police intimidation of newspapers and radio stations and ensure that the media can operate freely," HRW said.
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