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Uganda’s Silent Wounds: A Decade of Death, Disappearance, and Defiance

Kakwenza displaying torture marks on his back when he visited the president of the leading opposition party in parliament National Unity Platform (NUP) president Robert Kyagulanyi Ssentamu, days after being granted a court bail.

Eddie Mutwe is currently in prison in contravention of the constitutional clause that bars both the court and the prisons from entertaining hearing and remanding a suspect who has been tortured respectively.

Uganda Today EditionUganda’s Silent Wounds: A Decade of Death, Disappearance, and Defiance

By Uganda Today News Desk

Introduction: The Cost of Dissent

In Uganda, dissent is not a right—it is a risk. From 2015 to 2025, opposition supporters, activists, and journalists have lived under a state of constant siege. Hundreds have been killed, thousands abducted or tortured, and many more live in fear. The government’s response to political opposition has hardened from surveillance and intimidation to outright violence.

In a nation where speaking out is equated with subversion, even the act of supporting an opposition figure can make you a target. Today, we map the sorrow and resilience behind the headlines.

She died protecting them—like many who stood between Uganda’s oppressors and their prey.

1. Visual Timeline: Ten Years of Blood and Silence (2015–2025)

Year Victim Affiliation Incident State Response
2018 Yasin Kawuma Bobi Wine’s driver Shot in Arua by SFC Denial, no investigation
2020 Ritah Nabukenya NUP supporter Knocked down by police van Dismissed as accident
2020 Francis Senteza Bobi Wine aide Beaten to death by military Denial by army
2021 Hundreds of youth Central, Eastern Uganda Tortured in safe houses Disinformation campaigns
2023 DJ Fikie NUP youth mobilizer Tortured, silenced No arrests
2025 Eddie Mutwe NUP chief bodyguard Abducted, tortured Ongoing trauma

2. The Faces Left Behind: Stories of Grief and Resistance

a. “I Still Set a Plate for Him” — Mother of Yasin Kawuma

She lost her son in Arua. He was simply a driver. She now lives with unanswered questions and a grave that still waits for justice.

b. “My Child Vanished into a Drone” — Father of Missing Youth

He last saw his son being thrown into an unmarked van. It has been four years. He still walks to the local police post every week.

c. “He Was the Wall Between Bobi and the Bullet” — Wife of Eddie Mutwe

His body returned home, broken by torture. But his will did not. He speaks rarely, but when he does, he says, “They didn’t beat the truth out of me.”

3. A Culture of Fear: The Machinery of Repression

  • Drones (Unmarked Vans): Symbol of fear. Used in broad daylight.
  • Safe Houses: Torture chambers with state impunity.
  • Military Courts: Used against civilians in violation of legal norms.
  • Media Blackouts: State-controlled outlets air disinformation or remain silent.

Quotes from Chapter Four, Uganda Law Society, and Human Rights Watch highlight the decay of judicial independence and erosion of civil rights.

4. Rename the Republic: A Satirical Rebuttal

As analyst Christopher Isaac Lubogo wrote in his recent essay, “The People’s Clan of Bachwezi,” Uganda now resembles an estate of dynastic rule. The language of the crown dominates state appointments, national identity, and justice. Repression is not random—it is structured.

5. Conclusion: Dare to Name the Pain

This story is not just one of suffering—it is one of silence. Uganda’s greatest wound is not only the bodies it buries, but the voices it silences.

If healing is to happen, we must speak, remember, and demand. A republic cannot thrive where fear reigns, where bloodlines trump ballots, and where truth is buried with its speakers.

“Justice is not blind in Uganda—it is gagged.”

May we dare to dream again. May we dare to rename—this time, not to reflect domination, but restoration.

Published by www.ugandatoday.co.ug, your trusted source for news and analysis

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