NUP’s Rubongoya Writes To UHRC Over Abducted Supporters

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NUP's Rubongoya Writes To UHRC Over Abducted Supporters

The Secretary General of National Unity Platform (NUP) David Lewis Rubongoya has written to the Uganda Human Rights Commission (UHRC) over the alleged abduction of their five supporters.

According to Rubongoya, the abductees including Khalid Sebi, Mubiru Sadat Sadam Alex Kabugo Kasaija, Sebunya Yasin and Kagimu Fred were “violently” picked up from Nakaseke District by a drone and one from Salama Road in Kampala

According to Rubongoya’ dated February 21 2023, the state operatives have continued to abduct their supporters, hold them incommunicado and subject them to torture and cruel treatment which is against the law.

NUP’s Letter To Uganda Human Rights Commission

“In accordance with Article 52 (1) of the 1995 Constitution, I hereby lodge another complaint regarding five more NUP supporters who have recently been abducted by armed security operatives moving in drones and are still missing,” the letter reads in part.

”As you are aware, state operatives have continued to abduct our supporters, hold them incommunicado and subject them to torture and cruel treatment. Many have returned with grave torture marks, while others have not been seen or heard from for months or years now.

The List Of Alleged Abducted NUP Supporters

“The list and details of the recent victims and the circumstances of their abduction are attached herein. The family members of these victims, as well as our legal teams, have tried to trace them without success. I accordingly request the commission to expeditiously investigate the whereabouts of these persons and ensure they reunite with their families as soon as possible” the letter added.

“The commission should also exercise its mandate and put an end to this crisis of violent abductions and incommunicado detentions targeting our supporters,” he said, adding that family members have chilling tales of how much violence their loved ones were subjected to while being taken away.

“We usually report these matters so we are on record because we believe there will be time for accountability for these crimes against humanity,” he said.

 For the past three years, NUP has repeatedly accused the government through security organs of abducting some of its supporters and subjecting them to torture as one of the methods used for persecution.

 At least 54 people, most of them believed to have been NUP supporters, were killed and others sustained serious injuries as security forces worked to end two days of protests that followed Kyagulanyi’s November 18, 2020, arrest in Luuka District.

Recently, the UHRC chairperson, Mariam Wangadya said the commission wrote to the NUP Secretary General, a copy of the letter they sent to the party president Robert Kyagulanyi alias Bobi Wine to provide details of the missing persons.

She however accused the party of being part of the growing trend by politicians to use non-existent abductions as a political mobilisation tool.

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