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Rights activists criticize Uganda for academic's conviction

Friday August 02 2019

Activists say government is using electronic communications laws to stifle dissent.

IN SUMMARY

  • A Ugandan court on Thursday found controversial Makerere University academic Dr Stella Nyanzi guilty of cyber harassment.
  • Amnesty International says the verdict should be quashed and Dr Nyanzi freed immediately.
  • Critics say Yoweri Museveni is increasingly becoming intolerant of dissent as resistance to his rule grows.
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Rights activists on Friday accused the Ugandan government of using electronic communications laws to stifle dissent, after a prominent academic was convicted for cyber-harassment over a Facebook post critical of President Yoweri Museveni.

Stella Nyanzi, a university lecturer and researcher who once called Museveni “a pair of buttocks”, has drawn the government’s wrath for her attacks on him.

Laced with profanity and sexually explicit language, it is posted on her Facebook page and often shared widely by her followers.

A court on Thursday found her guilty of cyber harassment, an offence under Uganda’s computer-misuse law.

The offence carries a sentence of three years or a fine of Ush1.4 million ($379). A sentence is expected to be handed down later on Friday.

The offence stemmed from a Facebook post last year in which she insulted Museveni with a profanity.

“This verdict is outrageous and flies in the face of Uganda’s obligations to uphold the right to freedom of expression...and demonstrates the depths of the government’s intolerance of criticism,” said Joan Nyanyuki, director for East Africa at human rights pressure group Amnesty International.

Amnesty said in the statement the verdict should be quashed and Nyanzi, who has been in jail since November last year, freed immediately.

“The Ugandan authorities must scrap the Computer Misuse Act...which has been used systematically to harass, intimidate and stifle government critics,” Nyanyuki said.

Critics say Museveni, in power since 1986, is increasingly becoming intolerant of dissent as resistance to his rule grows.

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