(Reuters) - Ugandan opposition presidential candidate Bobi Wine was arrested on Tuesday after handing in his nomination papers to the election body, his party’s spokesman said.
Wine, 38, a musician turned politician whose real name is
Robert Kyagulanyi, aims to end Yoweri Museveni’s more than a third of a century
in power, which makes him Africa’s third longest-ruling president. Elections
are scheduled for February next year.
“They (police) used a hammer and broke the windows of his
vehicle and forcefully dragged him out ... they bundled him into their own
vehicle and took off,” Joel Senyonyi, spokesman for the National Unity Party,
said, adding he did not know why Wine was arrested.
Police spokesman Luke Owoyesigire said he had yet to
receive a briefing on the arrest and promised to comment later.
Wine’s youthful age and his music have earned him a large
following in the relatively young country of 42 million, rattling the ruling
National Resistance Movement party and drawing a security crackdown on his
supporters.
In a speech after being cleared to run for president but
before he was arrested, Wine said he aimed to “save Museveni from himself”.
“To you Mr Museveni, since you have failed to control your
greed and lust for power, our generation is determined to save you from
yourself and stop your 35-year-old dictatorship,” he said.
Don Wanyama, Museveni’s spokesman, did not respond to a
Reuters call for a comment, nor immediately respond to messages sent to his
phone.
Wine grew up in a slum near the centre of the capital
Kampala where he also has his recording studios and party offices.
He said being “born hustling and born to hustling parents,
raised in the ghettos” meant he could understand the struggles of ordinary
Ugandans.
Since Wine expressed his presidential ambitions, police and
the military have repeatedly dispersed his rallies, and beaten and detained his
supporters.
Museveni was cleared to run in the elections on Monday.
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