Friday, February 19, 2016

Museveni vs Besigye: Another tale of sit-Tight African President

Uganda's main opposition leader Kizza Besigye has been arrested for the third time in a week, as provisional results gave veteran President Yoweri Museveni an early lead in an election overshadowed by persistent claims of vote-rigging. A Reuters news agency witness saw Besigye and several of his supporters loaded onto the back of a police van. Earlier in the afternoon police fired tear gas and stun grenades to disperse Besigye supporters outside the headquarters of his Forum for Democratic Change (FDC) party.

Several Ugandan journalists tweeting from the scene also reported the arrest. Partial results announced by the electoral commission showed Museveni had taken nearly 62per cent of the vote - far ahead of Besigye with 33 per cent, after about 23 percent of the votes had been counted.

The final election results are expected to be announced on Saturday. Election day on Thursday was dominated by claims of vote-rigging and a previous Besigye arrest when he and his supporters tried to show journalists what they said was a vote-rigging operation in a suburban house. Besigye was also arrested on Thursday when police stopped him from campaigning in the centre of the capital Kampala, prompting his supporters to stage an impromptu angry protest. The poll was also marred by delays in delivering voting materials, especially in areas seen as opposition strongholds, as well as a government shutdown of social media sites such as Twitter and Facebook.

Jonathan Taremwa, a spokesman for the electoral commission, told Al Jazeera that the vote was "transparent" and "fair"."Some people didn't get to vote. It was unfortunate, it was regrettable, and the commission offered an apology. We finally had stations [affected by delays] opened for votes and later extended the voting from 4pm to 7pm," Taremwa said.
"Where there was fracas and the vote was not able to continue we postponed it. As I speak to you now, voting is continuing in those polling stations. So all is settled and all is well," he said.
Besigye's supporters said the delays were deliberate and were aimed at favouring Museveni, whose rival is popular in Kampala. The head of the Commonwealth Observer Group, former Nigerian President Olusegun Obasanjo, called the long delays "absolutely inexcusable," the AP news agency reported.

Museveni, 71, a former rebel who seized power in 1986, is widely expected to win a fifth term, which would extend his power into a fourth decade. Besigye, 59, was Museveni's field doctor during the war which brought him to power, and served as deputy interior minister in his first cabinet. He broke ranks with the president in 1999, saying Museveni was no longer a democrat.
Previous elections in 2006 and 2011 were marred by violent and occasionally deadly street protests and a liberal use of tear gas by heavy-handed police. But, apart from Thursday's protests, the run-up to this year's poll was mostly peaceful."Whoever will try to bring violence, you will see what we shall do to him. Those who want violence should play somewhere else, not Uganda," Museveni told thousands of supporters in his final rally on Tuesday.
Besigye said ahead of the election that he did not believe it would be either free or fair




Source: [Al-Jazeera]


Related story: Photo News: All the details of Uganda election in pictures. https://t.co/YWpLI1weXA


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