Uganda will not renew mandate for UN rights office – foreign affairs minister

Uganda opposition leader Robert Kyagulanyi, also known as Bobi Wine, looks on during a scuffle in which his supporters and journalists were assaulted by Uganda Military Police outside the UN Human Rights offices in Kampala, on February 17, 2021. Wine, centre front, was delivering a petition to the UN for alleged human rights abuses on his supporters by Ugandan security forces during the 2021 Presidential campaign. Picture: Badru Katumba / AFP

Uganda opposition leader Robert Kyagulanyi, also known as Bobi Wine, looks on during a scuffle in which his supporters and journalists were assaulted by Uganda Military Police outside the UN Human Rights offices in Kampala, on February 17, 2021. Wine, centre front, was delivering a petition to the UN for alleged human rights abuses on his supporters by Ugandan security forces during the 2021 Presidential campaign. Picture: Badru Katumba / AFP

Published Feb 8, 2023

Share

Kampala - Uganda said on Wednesday it would not renew its mandate for the UN's rights office, a move criticised in a country where campaigners say freedoms are threatened.

This means that the human rights monitor's Kampala office will close when its authorisation expires this year.

"Our human rights record over the years has tremendously improved under our able leadership of President (Yoweri) Museveni," state minister for foreign affairs Henry Okello Oryem said.

He said Uganda had developed "vibrant" internal bodies such as the Uganda Human Rights Commission and civil society groups which monitored its human rights performance.

Uganda opposition leader Robert Kyagulanyi, also known as Bobi Wine, looks on during a scuffle in which his supporters and journalists were assaulted by Uganda Military Police outside the UN Human Rights offices in Kampala, on February 17, 2021. Wine, centre front, was delivering a petition to the UN for alleged human rights abuses on his supporters by Ugandan security forces during the 2021 Presidential campaign. Picture: Badru Katumba / AFP

The East African country has however seen a series of crackdowns on those opposed to Museveni's 36-year rule, with journalists attacked, lawyers jailed, and opposition leaders violently muzzled.

In November last year, the UN's Committee Against Torture voiced its concern about reports that "torture and ill-treatment continued to be frequently practised in the country".

It also called for Uganda to abolish the use of unauthorised places of detention described as "safe houses".

'Stumbling block'

Uganda wrote to the Office of the UN High Commissioner for Human Rights (OHCHR) on February 3 to announce it would not be renewing the mandate beyond its current term.

The letter, seen by AFP, said the move reflected "the strong government commitment to the promotion and protection of human rights, the prevailing peace throughout the country coupled with strong national human rights institutions and a vibrant civil society with the capacity to monitor the promotion and protection of human rights throughout the country".

Seif Magango, a spokesman for the OHCHR, said the Ugandan government had taken "a unilateral decision" on the issue.

"Discussions are ongoing with the Ugandan authorities," he said.

The move was criticised by the opposition, which accused the government of being "paranoid".

"It's not surprising they are not renewing the mandate of the UN office because they fear strict observance of human rights," said shadow foreign minister Muwada Nkunyingi of the National Unity Platform.

"The government wants to violate human rights unhindered and this office is seen as a stumbling block to their evil intentions towards Ugandans," he said.

The National Unity Platform is led by Robert Kyagulanyi, also known as Bobi Wine, who unsuccessfully challenged Museveni in the January 2021 election and has often been targeted by security forces.

The UN office was in the spotlight that year when security forces beat up a group of political activists who had gone there to petition the organisation for intervention in alleged rights violations after the polls.

Supporters of Uganda opposition leader Robert Kyagulanyi, also known as Bobi Wine, and local and foreign journalists are assaulted by Uganda Military Police outside the UN Human RIghts offices on February 17, 2021, when Wine was delivering a petition to the UN offices for alleged human rights abuses on his supporters by security forces during the 2021 Presidential campaign. Picture: Badru Katumba / AFP

Journalists covering the protests were roughed up. Several were injured and their equipment briefly was confiscated before the then-head of the military, David Muhoozi, apologised.

The UN rights office in Kampala was initially set up in 2005 and its mandate has previously been renewed every few years.

AFP