Kampala,
13th/December/2014;
A
City Hall Court in Kampala has sentenced a freelance journalist,
William Ntege aka Buganda Kyumakyayesu to two months in prison on
charges of criminal trespass and being a common nuisance at the
Parliament of Uganda. Ntege had gone to Parliament to petition the
Speaker, Rebecca Kadaga over police brutality on journalists and
other Ugandans.
A
Senior Grade one magistrate Elias Kakooza convicted Ntege to jail
over criminal trespass, while cautioned him on the second count of
common nuisance.
Prosecution
led by State Attorney Miriam Njuki told court that on 9th/Dec/2014,
at Parliament in Kampala, Ntege did an act not authorized by law when
he lawfully entered into the parliamentary building but remained
there with an intention to demonstrate and disrupt business within
parliament. Police confiscated his audio and visual evidence to
police brutality.
She
told court that Ntege also chained and padlocked himself on a bar at
the fly-over connecting the South wing to Northern wing of the
parliament building, and that efforts to ask him to leave failed
until the officers sought the services of a technician to cut the
chain, leading to his arrest and prosecution.
Ntege
is the second journalist to be convicted and sentenced to prison this
year, after Ronald Ssembuusi a correspondent with CBS radio was
convicted and sentenced to either one year in prison or pay a One
million Shillings fine (USD 400) over criminal defamation. Ssembuusi
has since appealed his conviction and sentence at the High Court in
Masaka.
Ntege
has severally been a victim of police brutality while on duty, his
video cameras destroyed and confiscated on most of the occasions, yet
the perpetrators were never acted upon. He told HRNJ-Uganda at the
KCCA Hall Court that he would appeal his conviction and sentence
saying he was not fairly tried as he was not directly asked to plead
to the charges, which he denies to have committed.
“HRNJ-Uganda
is dismayed with the hasty way in which Ntege was tried and
convicted. We would therefore support him to challenge his conviction
and sentence. The police should desist from bringing tramped up
charges against journalists and Ugandans who take to peaceful
demonstration which is provided for under the Constitution of Uganda”
said Robert Ssempala, the HRNJ-Uganda National Coordinator.
For
More Information Contact; Human Rights Network for Journalists-Uganda (HRNJ-Uganda)
Plot 18, Block 12 Stensera Road Kayanja Triangle Zone
P.O.BOX. 71314 Clock Tower Kampala. Tel: +256-414-272934 / +256-414-667627
E-mail: info@hrnjuganda.org / humanrajournalists@yahoo.co.uk
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