Advertisement

Uganda hands over to Kenya six cattle rustling suspects

Monday March 06 2023
Cattle Rustlers

Suspected cattle rustlers from Turkana are handed over to Kenyan authorities after they were arrested in Uganda's Karamoja in February 2023. PHOTO | COURTESY | UPDF

By HELLEN GITHAIGA

Uganda has handed over six Kenyan cattle rustling suspects arrested in its Karamoja region that borders Turkana in Kenya.

The suspects were released to the Turkana County government by the Ugandan military as a “gesture of East African Community partnership and as a sign of peaceful co-existence.”

The exercise led by Brig Gen Felix Busizoori of the Uganda People’s Defence Forces (UPDF) was done at Moroto Army Barracks in northern Uganda and attended by Turkana County secretary and head of public service, Peter Eripete.

“The Turkana suspects were arrested alongside their kinship, the native Matheniko in different cordon and search operations where they were engaged in cattle rustling in Karamoja sub-region between 20th February to 26 February 2023,” the UPDF said Monday.

Brig Gen Busizoori urged Kenyan authorities to “penalise the suspects for abusing the peaceful co-existence and cross-border security arrangements”, saying letting them off the hook would encourage impunity.

He warned that those caught violating Ugandan laws would face the law in the country.

Advertisement

UPDF said eight Matheniko suspects arrested alongside the Turkanas would be subjected to Uganda’s courts of law.

Also read: Uganda roots for good policing to end cattle rustling

Last month, Kenya and Uganda initiated talks to open a one-stop border post in Lokiriama in northwest Kenya, that would seek to open up trade and fight livestock raids.

The two countries revived their September 2019 memorandum of understanding that sought to enhance cross-border trade between the Turkana and Karamoja, by establishing immigration and customs border points at Lokiriama, Nawountos and Nakitong’o.

The border region is mainly occupied by the Turkana and Pokot ethnic communities in northwestern Kenya, and the Karamajong, an ethnic group of agro-pastoral herders living in the northeast of Uganda.

These communities have over the years engaged in banditry, making the region unsafe.  The two countries, however, see the opening of the border post as one of the measures to end cattle rustling or stock theft, an age-old tradition that has been commercialised by international criminal networks in East Africa and the Horn.

Advertisement