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Posts archive for: 9 April, 2009
  • Rwandan genocide: Dead but not resting in peace

    A visit to our dead in Uganda

    L-R: A monument in Ggoolo, Mpigi District erected in memory of the victims of the 1994 Genocide against the Tutsi, Namirembe landing site where some of the bodies of the 1994 Genocide against the Tutsi were recoverd.
    BY IGNATIUS SSUUNA
    Reports have been rife that remains of victims of the 1994 Genocide against the Tutsi buried in Uganda are being disinterred for witchcraft purposes. IGNATIUS SSUUNA visited the sites and writes.

    Silence welcomes you as you open the gate at Ggoolo, one of the sites at which thousands of victims of the 1994 Genocide against the Tutsi are buried in Uganda. It’s so quiet you can’t even hear birds chirping.

    At the height of the 1994 Genocide against Tutsi, tens of thousands of victims were thrown into River Nyabarongo, a tributary of Lake Victoria. Their bodies were washed away down the river and ended up in Uganda and probably beyond.

    The bodies were later buried at six different sites in Uganda. The sites include Ggoolo, in Mpigi District, Labu, Namirembe, Malembu and Kasensero, all in Makasa District.

    At the entrance of Ggoolo sits Clinton Okoye, the overseer of this site. There are five mass graves here and home to 955 remains.

    The burial site here is well maintained. This land (3 acres) was donated by Muhammad Taban- owner of Big Ways Investment Limited. Taban employed Clinton Okoye to take care of the site.

    “Taban is a generous man,” Okoye begins. Okoye says he was scared at first because he didn’t know why these people had been killed. But after reading about the genocide, he accepted the job. Nobody can enter here without permission. A guard’s house is being built near the site.

    “I am not paid well. I only earn Shs 25,000 a month. But I am not complaining too much,” Okoye says.

    Okoye explains one of the reasons why he is paid to guard the site is to make sure that the remains are kept intact. He says some people in Uganda still believe in witchcraft because they think they can become rich overnight by using human bones in exchange for blessings from witchdoctors.

    “Everything here is cemented. Even if I don’t sleep at the site, nobody can exhume the bodies,” Okoye says. There are headstones at the mass graves on which words ‘victims of the Rwanda conflict’ are engraved.

    “This was an error and we shall soon rectify it,” Okoye sombrely says.

    Taban plans to improve the Ggoolo site to the level of Gisozi memorial site in Rwanda. “The government of Rwanda has already recognised our contribution. We are not demanding money from Rwanda.”

    Lambu

    There are nine graves here and the site houses 1718 bodies. However, the irony here is that though Ugandans living at the shores of Lake Victoria did a noble job of burying the dead during the Genocide, authorities in Kampala have reportedly refused Rwanda to exhume the bodies and accord them decent burial. As a result, the remains are in the bushes. Some graves are defaced and inaccessible.

    At Lambu, a visitor can hardly tell whether mass graves do exist.

    My guide John Lubowa, a resident of the area says nobody in the neighbourhood is paid to maintain the graves.

    “Sometimes, residents who clear the bushes covering the graves need money. Nothing can be done without money,” says Lubowa. There are also signs that cows graze atop the graves.

    Other sites

    Remains of the 1994 Genocide against the Tutsi at Namirembe, Dimo and Malembo were supposed to have been transferred to Lambu last year.

    The Rwandan embassy in Uganda built two mass graves at Lambu but Uganda blocked the move to transfer the remains.

    At Kasensero landing site, 2827 bodies are buried there.

    The Rwandan embassy here plans to cement the mass graves in Kasensero soon. Dimo is home to 2149 bodies while Malembo houses 1669 bones. Residents talked to say since the graves are not cemented and are in the bushes, the remains are not safe.

    “Remains of human beings not kept well can be abused. It is very common here,” Linda Nalukwago, a resident of Lwalaaro in Mpigi District said.

    A report compiled by the Parliamentary Standing Committee on Unity, Human Rights and the fight against Genocide recently visited Uganda to assess the situation of the remains buried there.

    After the visit, lawmakers expressed concern over the reluctance by relevant organs to rebury the remains. They recommended the remains be accorded decent burial as a matter of urgency.

    Ambassador speaks out

    Rwanda’s ambassador to Ugandan Ignatius Kamali recently met officials from the Ugandan Foreign Affairs Ministry to discuss the possibility of exhuming the bodies from the bushes.

    “We are still trying to convince Ugandan officials but we have not yet succeeded. They are giving three reasons why we should not exhume the dead,” Kamali reveals.

    One reason why the bodies should not be exhumed is that they could cause health problems to the people living in the area.

    The Ugandan government says it needs to get clearance from the Ministry of Health before Rwanda is allowed to exhume the bodies. But a source from the Ministry of Health in Uganda says this is not the first time bodies are to be exhumed.

    “Many bodies get exhumed. Some bodies of those died in the bush war in Luwero have been exhumed,” says the source who spoke on condition of anonymity.

    Ugandan leaders also asked Rwanda to give them time to establish the owner of the land on which the bodies will be buried. “They say the issue concerning land in Uganda is sensitive. When we met leaders here, they raised this issue,” Kamali said.

    Ugandan leaders are of the view that the graves be cemented in their respective locations.

    There is also argument that exhuming the remains is against the Ugandan culture. Let’s hope that soon a consensus will be reached to give our dear departed a decent burial.
    Adopted from The Newtimes, Rwanda, www.newtimes.co.rw

    Ends

  • Obasanjo, Mkapa pay tribute to Rwandans

    Obasanjo, Mkapa pay tribute to Rwandans

    BY EDMUND KAGIRE, Newtimes, Rwanda
    Former Presidents Olusegun Obasanjo of Nigeria and Benjamin Mkapa of Tanzania on Tuesday paid a courtesy call on President Paul Kagame at Urugwiro to show their support to Rwandans in commemorating the 1994 Genocide.

    “We always touch base with President Paul Kagame to discuss several issues facing the region but on this particular occasion we are here to join Rwandans and show our support. This is a special day for Rwanda” Obasanjo told Journalists after the short visit.

    The former leaders also said that this particular time that has left a dark spot in Rwanda’s History should not only be for Rwandans to remember or Africa but the whole world and the human race.

    The two Statesmen have also been actively involved together with Rwanda to resolve the conflict in Eastern Democratic of Congo (DRC) where remnants of the Ex-FAR/Interahamwe who carried out the atrocities in 1994, now known as the Democrtaic Forces for the Liberation of Rwanda (FDLR) are camped.

  • Museveni and Ugandan Judiciary

    President Yoweri Museveni with his renown critic Justice George Kanyeihamba during the opening of the East Africa Law Society conference and annual general meeting in 2006.
    Justice Kanyeihamba questions Museveni’s vision on patriotism
    By Isaac Imaka

    Kampala

    Justice Prof. G.W.Kanyeihamba—Justice of the Supreme Court on Tuesday blasted President Yoweri Museveni on patriotism saying that the president is preaching a virtue, whose meaning he does not fully understand.

    Kanyeihamba also accused the president of looking for people’s devotion to the person of the president instead of the nation.

    “Patriotism is a devotion and love for one’s country and not allegiance to an individual. If someone is going everywhere preaching patriotism; patriotism for whom if he tells MPs to place their parties before the nation,” Kanyeihamba said during a public lecture at Makerere University on constitutional amendments in Uganda’s constitution.

    The President is on nationwide education drive trying to teach Ugandans how to practice patriotism in a hope that this might curtail the increasing cases of corruption and bad governance.

    Prof. Kanyeihamba said that while addressing Members of Parliament sometime ago, he advised them to put the state first, their constituency next and lastly the party to which they are affiliated to, an argument that the president did not buy.

    “President Museveni strongly opposed my argument and he convened another meeting and told the MPs that they should place their party as the first priority and not the country,” Kanyeihamba said.

    He also noted that Uganda has never been well governed, and accused the present leadership and MPs of poor leadership, bad governance, and ignoring the rule of law, something that has exacerbated corruption and underdevelopment in the country.

    “The leadership and the mode of governance of today not only haunt Uganda but it is very bad. The current leadership and rulers appear more comfortable and wallowing in the same evils of the past. They look at how to accumulate wealth for themselves other than the nation,” he said

    He added: “MPs who are supposed to champion the rule of democracy have instead hesitated to fight bad governance and are indulging in aggravated corruption.”

    He added: “MPs who are supposed to champion the rule of democracy have instead hesitated to fight bad governance and are indulging in aggravated corruption.”

    The government of Uganda has for long been trying to fight bad governance and corruption in the country but the fight has always hit a dead end because of the unscrupulous legislators who instated of fighting corruption indulge in the act.

    The Professor said that although the president is trying to teach patriotism to fight corruption and bad governance, the country already has laws to fight corruption and bad governance and it only lacks good will from those who indulge in dubious activities and at the same time try to show the people that they care yet they do not.

    “Corruption and bad governance has not only become a danger to society but they have been accepted as a way of life,” he said.

    “What Uganda lacks to fight corruption and bad governance is not patriotism, a new law, or a court, but the political will from the people concerned.”

    Full version of a paper he presented at Makerere University on April 7.

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    Justice Kanyeihamba questions Museveni’s vision on patriotism

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