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Bobi Wine: My plan on landing in Uganda

Wednesday September 19 2018
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Ugandan politician Robert Kyagulanyi, better known as Bobi Wine, gives a press conference on September 6, 2018 in Washington, DC. He says he is ready to return home. PHOTO | ERIC BARADAT | AFP

By MONITOR

Ugandan pop star-turned-politician Robert Kyagulanyi, known as Bobi Wine, says he is ready to return to Kampala after his medical tour of the US.

The Kyadondo East MP sought specialised care in Washington DC after suffering injuries from alleged torture by Uganda police and army in chaos that marred a by-election campaign in northwestern Arua Municipality in August.

After spending close to three weeks in hospital, Mr Kyagulanyi on Tuesday said preparations for his return to Uganda were complete.

In a video shared on social media, the MP said he would continue with the struggle for “a better Uganda”.

“I am coming back this Thursday and I encourage citizens to continue struggling for a better Uganda,” he said.

“The people we are scared of are actually very scared of us. They don’t know how to deal with a united group of young people.”

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He denied the government’s claims that members of his ‘People Power’ movement are violent.

“People Power is not about Bobi Wine but all the people struggling to have a better country. I’m only just one of the more 40 million Ugandans that continue to suffer,” he said.

“We’re not a group of violent people. We despise violence and are not associated with violent whatsoever. I have been telling you right from the beginning that we should be peaceful but assertive.”

He added: “I know President Museveni and his lieutenants have tried so much to project us as a violent group so that they can respond to us with violence. Thy have tried to twist everything we say to make it sound like a call for violence.”

Mr Museveni’s government on Monday said Mr Kyagulanyi was free to return but should not make it an issue.

“We don't consider Bobi Wine's absence as a much ado. We shall provide, as a government, the usual security and protection guarantees that we provide for all travellers and leaders of his level and if need be to be escorted to his destination. But he should not make his return an issue,” government spokesperson Ofwono Opondo told journalists in Kampala on Monday.

“By attempting to make it an issue it would appear as if government of Uganda sent him away and is afraid of him returning. His citizenship and rights here are not contested.”

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