Uganda charges 45 Rwandans with ‘terrorism’

Displaced families gather outside a school, which serves as their shelter by night, in this December 16, 2017 photo, in Oicha. (AFP)

KAMPALA: Uganda has charged 45 Rwandans with terrorism following their arrest at the border with Tanzania earlier this month, a police spokesman said Friday.
“We arrested 43 Rwandan suspects at the border with Tanzania on Dec. 11. On further investigations two other suspects were arrested,” police spokesman Emilian Kayima told AFP.
All have been charged “with carrying forged documents, false identities and the serious charge of terrorism as their intentions were pointing to that,” he said without providing more details.
The suspects are being held at Nalufenya prison, east of the capital Kampala, often used to jail those accused of terrorism or involvement with rebel groups.
The suspects had been living in Uganda and claim they were traveling to Tanzania as evangelists.
But Rwanda says they are members of the Rwanda National Congress, an opposition party in exile led by former allies of President Paul Kagame, that Kigali deems a terrorist organization.
Neighbours Rwanda and Uganda have a fractious relationship, with their leaders competing for regional influence.
Rwanda has long blamed Uganda for harboring dissidents.
Two days after the 45 arrests, Rwanda’s Foreign Ministry in a letter pressured Uganda to charge the suspects.
The ministry accused Kampala of facilitating the recruitment of rebels and their travel to training camps, allegedly in eastern Democratic Republic of Congo.
The same letter denounced “multiple unjustified arrests” of Kigali loyalists in recent months, including members of the ruling Rwandan Patriotic Front.
Ugandan authorities say the loyalists were abducting and killing dissident Rwandan refugees, a claim backed by human rights groups but dismissed by Kigali.