Uganda: Lwengo District Boss Mutabazi Suspended
The Lwengo District LC5 Mr. Mutabazi was suspended by his own council for unreasonable behaviour including canning his own residents.
The Great Lakes Human Rights Link had requested the Ugandan government to probe his gross misconduct and human rights violations which could constitute torture
We are therefore pleased that his own council has acted very swiftly to suspend him.
We also request the Ugandan police to probe his conduct and bring him to justice.
This should send a signal to other leaders who behave like Mr Mutabazi that impunity will not be tolerated, other leaders In Uganda in particular and East Africa in General are still behaving like Mr Mutabazi.
Uganda: Mutabazi LCV brutality against the people
H.E. Yoweri Kaguta Museveni,
President of the Republic of the Uganda
State House Nakasero
Box 25497, Kampla, Uganda
30.11.2014
Lwengo LC V brutality against the people is an abuse of power and is unacceptable
Mutabazi dressed in a hurt and a stick warning citizens
The Lwengo LC V Chairman Mr., George Mutabazi was recently caught on Camera beating his own people in what he calls enforcement of community service. This is brutality and the abuse of authority by the unwarranted infliction of excessive force by the above LCV Chairman to the innocent people in what he calls an aspect of law enforcement.
The Uganda’s legislation does not recognize community service as a legal obligation but rather a moral obligation which is voluntarily carried out by the Citizens if they wish so. The Great Lakes Human Rights Link would like to share its concerns with the Ugandan Human Rights Organizations for an investigation in the above issues as soon as possible in order to deter similar scenarios by other law enforcement organizations in Uganda in Particular and in the great lakes in general.
While we recommend voluntary community service, we however, oppose in the strongest terms possible the abuse of power by government officials in the performance of their official duties. The term abuse of power is also applied to abuses by corrections personnel in municipal, state and federal penal facilities including military prisons.
While the brutality we witnessed on the recorded video was causing physical harm to the innocent civilians, we have serious concerns that it may also have involved psychological harm through the use of intimidation tactics beyond the scope of officially sanctioned legal procedure. In the past regimes Uganda witnessed similar abuses by local officials but not as ugly aswe saw, where an official runs after civilians with a stick beating them as domesticated animals.
As I have mentioned above we call upon our partners in the defence of human rights to call accountability in those actions of the LC V Chairman and if there is any abuse of power, he should be held accountable.
At this stage we have an assumption that Mr George Mutabazi’s brutality against his own Citizens might not have been acted with the implicit approvals the government’s national policy. In the modern Uganda we don’t expect an individual who engage in cases of any brutality to cover his actions under the government national policy, or to appear as if he did it with the tacit approval of his superiors. Indeed, Mr. Mutabazi should be investigated and if possible a commission of inquiry is established, he should therefore be held fully accountable for his actions.
Noble Marara
Secretary General
Great Lakes Human Rights Link.
greatlakeshumanrightslink@gmail.com
+447429014688
CC
Inspector general of Uganda police Kale Kaihura
London Metropolitan Police
Boarder Force Home Office United Kingdom