Ugandan university lecturer jailed for 18 months for critcising Museveni on Facebook

Ugandan university lecturer jailed for 18 months for critcising Museveni on Facebook

by Joseph Anthony
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Stella Nyanzi

A Ugandan court jailed a prominent academic on Friday for 18 months on cyber harassment charges stemming from a Facebook post that included sexually explicit criticism of long-ruling President Yoweri Museveni.

The verdict drew the ire of rights activists who accused the government of using laws about electronic communications to stifle political dissent.

Stella Nyanzi, a university lecturer and researcher who once called Museveni โ€œa pair of buttocksโ€, has drawn the governmentโ€™s wrath for her attacks on him. Her commentary, laced with profanity, is posted on her Facebook page and often shared widely by her followers.

She attended her sentencing session in a court in the centre of the capital Kampala via video link from a maximum security prison by the shores of Lake Victoria on the cityโ€™s outskirts.

Nyanzi shouted vulgarities and flashed her breasts and a double middle finger on several occasions during the session.

Her offence stemmed from a Facebook post last year in which she said she wished Museveni, 74, had been burned up by the โ€œacidic pusโ€ in his motherโ€™s birth canal.

โ€œMy presence in your Court as a suspect and prisoner highlights multiple facets of dictatorship. I exposed the entrenchment of autocracy,โ€ she wrote in her most recent post, a poem about her court case. โ€œI refuse to be a mere spectator in the struggle to oust the worst dictator.โ€

Joan Nyanyuki, director for East Africa at human rights pressure group Amnesty International, said: โ€œThis verdict is outrageous and flies in the face of Ugandaโ€™s obligations to uphold the right to freedom of expression … and demonstrates the depths of the governmentโ€™s intolerance of criticism.โ€

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

โ€œThe Ugandan authorities must scrap the Computer Misuse Act… which has been used systematically to harass, intimidate and stifle government critics,โ€ Nyanyuki said.

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

Nyanziโ€™s lawyer, Isaac Ssemakkadde, told Reuters she had yet to decide on whether to appeal her conviction.

REUTERS

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