Uganda MILITARY RULE UNDER AMIN
Idi Amin addresses the United Nations General Assembly in New York,
October 1975.
Courtesy United Nations (T. Chen)
By January 1971, Obote was prepared to rid himself of
the
potential threat posed by Amin. Departing for the
Commonwealth
Conference of Heads of Government at Singapore, he relayed
orders
to loyal Langi officers that Amin and his supporters in
the army
were to be arrested. Various versions emerged of the way
this
news was leaked to Amin; in any case, Amin decided to
strike
first. In the early morning hours of January 25, 1971,
mechanized
units loyal to him attacked strategic targets in Kampala
and the
airport at Entebbe, where the first shell fired by a
pro-Amin
tank commander killed two Roman Catholic priests in the
airport
waiting room. Amin's troops easily overcame the
disorganized
opposition to the coup, and Amin almost immediately
initiated
mass executions of Acholi and Langi troops, whom he
believed to
be pro-Obote.
The Amin coup was warmly welcomed by most of the people
of
the Buganda kingdom, which Obote had attempted to
dismantle. They
seemed willing to forget that their new president, Idi
Amin, had
been the tool of that military suppression. Amin made the
usual
statements about his government's intent to play a mere
"caretaker role" until the country could recover
sufficiently for
civilian rule. Amin repudiated Obote's nonaligned foreign
policy,
and his government was quickly recognized by Israel,
Britain, and
the United States. By contrast, presidents Julius Nyerere
of
Tanzania, Kenneth Kaunda of Zambia, Jomo Kenyatta of
Kenya, and
the Organization of African Unity (OAU) initially refused
to
accept the legitimacy of the new military government.
Nyerere, in
particular, opposed Amin's regime, and he offered
hospitality to
the exiled Obote, facilitating his attempts to raise a
force and
return to power.
Amin's military experience, which was virtually his
only
experience, determined the character of his rule. He
renamed
Government House "the Command Post," instituted an
advisory
defense council composed of military commanders, placed
military
tribunals above the system of civil law, appointed
soldiers to
top government posts and parastatal agencies, and even
informed
the newly inducted civilian cabinet ministers that they
would be
subject to military discipline. Uganda was, in effect,
governed
from a collection of military barracks scattered across
the
country, where battalion commanders, acting like local
warlords,
represented the coercive arm of the government. The GSU
was
disbanded and replaced by the State Research Bureau (SRB;
see
Idi Amin and Military Rule
, ch. 5). SRB headquarters at
Nakasero
became the scene of torture and grisly executions over the
next
several years.
Despite its outward display of a military chain of
command,
Amin's government was arguably more riddled with
rivalries,
regional divisions, and ethnic politics than the UPC
coalition
that it had replaced. The army itself was an arena of
lethal
competition, in which losers were usually eliminated.
Within the
officer corps, those trained in Britain opposed those
trained in
Israel, and both stood against the untrained, who soon
eliminated
many of the army's most experienced officers. In 1966,
well
before the Amin era, northerners in the army had assaulted
and
harassed soldiers from the south. In 1971 and 1972, the
Lugbara
and Kakwa (Amin's ethnic group) from the West Nile were
slaughtering northern Acholi and Langi, who were
identified with
Obote. Then the Kakwa fought the Lugbara. Amin came to
rely on
Nubians and on former Anya Nya rebels from southern Sudan.
The army, which had been progressively expanded under
Obote,
was further doubled and redoubled under Amin. Recruitment
was
largely, but not entirely, in the north. There were
periodic
purges, when various battalion commanders were viewed as
potential problems or became real threats. Each purge
provided
new opportunities for promotions from the ranks. The
commander of
the air force, Smuts Guweddeko, had previously worked as a
telephone operator; the unofficial executioner for the
regime,
Major Malyamungu, had formerly been a nightwatch officer.
By the
mid-1970s, only the most trustworthy military units were
allowed
ammunition, although this prohibition did not prevent a
series of
mutinies and murders. An attempt by an American
journalist,
Nicholas Stroh, and his colleague, Robert Siedle, to
investigate
one of these barracks outbreaks in 1972 at the Simba
battalion in
Mbarara led to their disappearances and later deaths.
Amin never forgot the source of his power. He spent
much of
his time rewarding, promoting, and manipulating the army.
Financing his ever-increasing military expenditures was a
continuing concern. Early in 1972, he reversed foreign
policy--
never a major issue for Amin--to secure financial and
military
aid from Muammar Qadhafi of Libya. Amin expelled the
remaining
Israeli advisers, to whom he was much indebted, and became
vociferously anti-Israel. To induce foreign aid from Saudi
Arabia, he rediscovered his previously neglected Islamic
heritage. He also commissioned the construction of a great
mosque
on Kampala Hill in the capital city, but it was never
completed
because much of the money intended for it was embezzled.
In September 1972, Amin expelled almost all of Uganda's
50,000 Asians and seized their property. Although Amin
proclaimed
that the "common man" was the beneficiary of this drastic
act--
which proved immensely popular--it was actually the army
that
emerged with the houses, cars, and businesses of the
departing
Asian minority. This expropriation of property proved
disastrous
for the already declining economy. Businesses were run
into the
ground, cement factories at Tororo and Fort Portal
collapsed from
lack of maintenance, and sugar production literally ground
to a
halt, as unmaintained machinery jammed permanently.
Uganda's
export crops were sold by government parastatals, but most
of the
foreign currency they earned went for purchasing imports
for the
army. The most famous example was the so-called "whiskey
run" to
Stansted Airport in Britain, where planeloads of Scotch
whiskey,
transistor radios, and luxury items were purchased for
Amin to
distribute among his officers and troops. An African
proverb, it
was said, summed up Amin's treatment of his army: "A dog
with a
bone in its mouth can't bite."
The rural African producers, particularly of coffee,
turned
to smuggling, especially to Kenya. The smuggling problem
became
an obsession with Amin; toward the end of his rule, he
appointed
his mercenary adviser, the former British citizen Bob
Astles, to
take all necessary steps to eliminate the problem. These
steps
included orders to shoot smugglers on sight.
Another near-obsession for Amin was the threat of a
counterattack by former president Obote. Shortly after the
expulsion of Asians in 1972, Obote did launch such an
attempt
across the Tanzanian border into southwestern Uganda. His
small
army contingent in twenty-seven trucks set out to capture
the
southern Ugandan military post at Masaka but instead
settled down
to await a general uprising against Amin, which did not
occur. A
planned seizure of the airport at Entebbe by soldiers in
an
allegedly hijacked East African Airways passenger aircraft
was
aborted when Obote's pilot blew out the aircraft's tires
and it
remained in Tanzania. Amin was able to mobilize his more
reliable
Malire Mechanical Regiment and expel the invaders.
Although jubilant at his success, Amin realized that
Obote,
with Nyerere's aid, might try again. He had the SRB and
the newly
formed Public Safety Unit (PSU) redouble their efforts to
uncover
subversives and other imagined enemies of the state.
General fear
and insecurity became a way of life for the populace, as
thousands of people disappeared. In an ominous twist,
people
sometimes learned by listening to the radio that they were
"about
to disappear." State terrorism was evidenced in a series
of
spectacular incidents; for example, High Court Judge
Benedicto
Kiwanuka, former head of government and leader of the
banned DP,
was seized directly from his courtroom. Like many other
victims,
he was forced to remove his shoes and then bundled into
the trunk
of a car, never to be seen alive again. Whether calculated
or
not, the symbolism of a pair of shoes by the roadside to
mark the
passing of a human life was a bizarre yet piercing form of
state
terrorism.
Amin did attempt to establish ties with an
international
terrorist group in July 1976, when he offered the
Palestinian
hijackers of an Air France flight from Tel Aviv a
protected base
at the old airport at Entebbe, from which to press their
demands
in exchange for the release of Israeli hostages. The
dramatic
rescue of the hostages by Israeli commandos was a severe
blow to
Amin, unassuaged by his murder of a hospitalized hostage,
Dora
Block, and his mass execution of Entebbe airport
personnel.
Amin's government, conducted by often erratic personal
proclamation, continued on. Because he was illiterate--a
disability shared with most of his higher ranking
officers--Amin
relayed orders and policy decisions orally by telephone,
over the
radio, and in long rambling speeches to which civil
servants
learned to pay close attention. The bureaucracy became
paralyzed
as government administrators feared to make what might
prove to
be a wrong decision. The minister of defense demanded and
was
given the Ministry of Education office building, but then
the
decision was reversed. Important education files were lost
during
their transfer back and forth by wheelbarrow. In many
respects,
Amin's government in the 1970s resembled the governments
of
nineteenth-century African monarchs, with the same
problems of
enforcing orders at a distance, controlling rival factions
at
court, and rewarding loyal followers with plunder.
However,
Amin's regime was possibly less efficient than those of
the
precolonial monarchs.
Religious conflict was another characteristic of the
Amin
regime that had its origins in the nineteenth century.
After
rediscovering his Islamic allegiance in the effort to gain
foreign aid from Libya and Saudi Arabia, Amin began to pay
more
attention to the formerly deprived Muslims in Uganda, a
move
which turned out to be a mixed blessing for them. Muslims
began
to do well in what economic opportunities yet remained,
the more
so if they had relatives in the army. Construction work
began on
Kibule Hill, the site of Kampala's most prominent mosque.
Many
Ugandan Muslims with a sense of history believed that the
Muslim
defeat by Christians in 1889 was finally being redressed.
Christians, in turn, perceived that they were under siege
as a
religious group; it was clear that Amin viewed the
churches as
potential centers of opposition. A number of priests and
ministers disappeared in the course of the 1970s, but the
matter
reached a climax with the formal protest against army
terrorism
in 1977 by Church of Uganda ministers, led by Archbishop
Janan
Luwum. Although Luwum's body was subsequently recovered
from a
clumsily contrived "auto accident," subsequent
investigations
revealed that Luwum had been shot to death by Amin
himself. This
latest in a long line of atrocities was greeted with
international condemnation, but apart from the continued
trade
boycott initiated by the United States in July 1978,
verbal
condemnation was not accompanied by action.
By 1978 Amin's circle of close associates had shrunk
significantly--the result of defections and executions. It
was
increasingly risky to be too close to Amin, as his vice
president
and formerly trusted associate, General Mustafa Adrisi,
discovered. When Adrisi was injured in a suspicious auto
accident, troops loyal to him became restive. The once
reliable
Malire Mechanized Regiment mutinied, as did other units.
In
October 1978, Amin sent troops still loyal to him against
the
mutineers, some of whom fled across the Tanzanian border.
Amin
then claimed that Tanzanian President Nyerere, his
perennial
enemy, had been at the root of his troubles. Amin accused
Nyerere
of waging war against Uganda, and, hoping to divert
attention
from his internal troubles and rally Uganda against the
foreign
adversary, Amin invaded Tanzanian territory and formally
annexed
a section across the Kagera River boundary on November 1,
1978
(see Idi Amin and Military Rule
, ch. 5).
Nyerere mobilized his citizen army reserves and
counterattacked, joined by Ugandan exiles united as the
Uganda
National Liberation Army (UNLA). The Ugandan Army
retreated
steadily, expending much of its energy by looting along
the way.
Libya's Qadhafi sent 3,000 troops to aid fellow Muslim
Amin, but
the Libyans soon found themselves on the front line, while
behind
them Ugandan Army units were using supply trucks to carry
their
newly plundered wealth in the opposite direction. Tanzania
and
the UNLA took Kampala in April 1979, and Amin fled by air,
first
to Libya and later to a seemingly permanent exile at
Jiddah,
Saudi Arabia. The war that had cost Tanzania an estimated
US$1
million per day was over. What kind of government would
attempt
the monumental task of rebuilding the economically and
psychologically devastated country, which had lost an
estimated
300,000 victims to Amin's murderous eight-year regime?
Data as of December 1990
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