Bushenyi,
24th
April 2015;
Zadock Amanyisa, a Daily Monitor correspondent based in Bushenyi was
on 22nd
April incarcerated and charged by the police for allegedly
disseminating false news. The journalist reported a story on the same
day titled “Let
us return to Obote’s security system”.
The story quoted the security minister, Mary Karooro Okurut as saying
“we need to bring back the mayumba kumi system of administration
where every 10 homes make a cluster, which gives the chairman LCI the
duty to identify who has slept in the village; that is how we shall
get to know and beware of strange people who are likely to cause
insecurity”.
Zadock
told HRNJ-Uganda that in his story, he analyzed the minister’s
remarks and compared her call to return to the ‘mayumba kumi’
security measure to mean that she wanted the community to adopt
President Obote’s ‘manyumba kumi’ security system which
included having a leader for every 10 house-holds.
“After
hearing the word ‘mayumba kumi’, I went to the community to find
out what it means. I spoke to a number of elderly persons who told me
that it was a security mechanism exported by Obote from Tanzania.
Some people said it was brought by Binaisa under UNLFP but I failed
to find enough evidence to back that. I then read articles on the
internet which also confirmed that it was an Obote system”
“On
22nd
April, I received a call from the OC CID Bushenyi who asked me to go
and meet him immediately adding that my quick response to his call
would save me. When I arrived at the station, he said that he had
orders from above to detain me for a story I had written”
When
HRNJ-Uganda contacted Peter Tindyebwa, the OC CID Bushenyi about the
‘orders from above’ to arrest, detain and charge the journalist,
he said “I acted on my own capacity and as a policeman I have
powers to arrest and detain, I was doing my work”. He also denied
having used the provisions of the Press and Journalist Act to charge
the journalist, and when asked under what law he based his charges,
he alluded to sections 179 and 180 of the Penal Code Act, that create
the offence of criminal defamation, adding that this was an official
matter and if we needed any information, we should go to his office,
as he was not sure of who he was talking to.
HRNJ-Uganda
is dismayed by the actions of the Uganda police in orchestrating the
arrest, and detention of a journalist on charges of disseminating
false information, an offence which was de-criminalized by the
Supreme Court in 2004, in the case of Charles Onyango Obbo &
Andrew Mwenda against the Attorney General. The provisions of the
Press and Journalist Act which have been allegedly used to charge the
journalist, give mandate to the disciplinary committee of the Media
Council and not the police over issues of professional conduct.
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 / admin@hrnjuganda.org
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 / admin@hrnjuganda.org