Monday, June 15, 2020

NRAHEROES GEN ELLY TUMWINE R0/00023

Elly Tumwine was born on 12 April 1954, in
Mbarara District. He attended Burunga Primary
School, Mbarara High School and St. Henry's
College Kitovu, before joining Makerere
University, where in 1977, he graduated with the
degree of Bachelor of Arts in Fine Art together
with the Diploma in Education
In 1978, he interrupted his teaching career to join
the FRONASA forces led by Yoweri Museveni to
fight the Idi Amin regime. In 1981, when
Museveni went to the bush to form the NRA, Elly
Tumwine went with him
It was early in the morning of February 6, 1981,
when a youthful Lt. Elly Tumwine fired a shot -
the first one in the National Resistance Army
(NRA) war. This shot marked the beginning of
the 1981-86 war that brought the NRM regime to
power.
Lt. Elly Tumwine was in charge of this battle
preparation. It was arranged that the first unit,
led by Lt. Sam Magara, would attack the
armoury, the second, under Elly Tumwine, would
neutralise the guards at the gate, while the third,
under Hannington Mugabi, would go for the arms
stores.
Enroute to the attack, Tumwine occupied the
front seat of the truck that had been occupied
by Museveni throughout the journey. This was
intended to avert any suspicion from the guards,
in case they recognised Museveni.
Just before Nkonge, the convoy briefly stopped
and Tumwine jumped off and he was left behind
by the convoy in the dark.
I chased it on foot,he later said. This was a
harrowing experience. He later caught up with
the convoy when it stopped to make final
preparations. As he approached the convoy,
Museveni saw him running alongside the driver's
cabin. When it stopped, he disembarked and
allowed Tumwine to take the front seat.
During the early years of the war, he was in
charge of a unit that controlled the Kampala-
Hoima road, especially in Kateera. In the
process, he lost an eye during a battle in the
rocky hills of Bukomero, not far away from
Katera.
“I led the battle (Bukomero) with Namara
Katabarwa. We would go with an unarmed force
with the hope that if you got a gun, someone
would use it,” Tumwine recalled
NRA fighters were quick on their feet. They were
lightly-armed and battle-hardened.
Topher Agaba, who would later serve in NRA’s
most deadly clandestine operations, participated
in the Bukomero battle.Agaba had just arrived in
the Mondlane wing of NRA when he was
appointed by Tumwiine as the latter’s bodyguard.
“We have a mission, you will be my bodyguard,”
Tumwiine told Agaba, who complied.
In Bukomero, the NRA combatants swept through
the area as Obote’s soldiers were felled by
bullets. “However, one of Obote’s surviving
soldiers remained in the houses after the first
platoon went through,” recalled Tumwiine,
adding, “That person shot me with a machine
gun. That’s how I was shot.”
Tumwiine could not tell who had shot him in the
eye. He thought “my whole face had gone off.
But I touched my face it was there. My escort
came and carried me.” The escort he was
referring to was Topher Agaba.
“I remember when he was shot, I was just right
behind him,” said Agaba during the trek in
Birembo earlier this week.“Tumwiine just fell in
my hands – with blood all over his face,” recalled
Agaba.
The force which was being commanded by Sam
Katabarwa comprising Moses Kanabi quickly
looked for a bicycle to evacuate the injured
Tumwiine.Unfortunately, the bicycle’s tyres
lacked pressure.
“So I was put on a bicycle which relied on rims
to carry me for a very long distance from
Bukomero to Mayanja hill. The journey lasted
about eight hours. When we reached the unit of
Gen David Tinyefuza alias Sejusa (Singo), they
gave me Valium, (sleeping pill) and I slept.”
On waking up, NRA combatants held a meeting
to decide Tumwiine’s fate. “They had two
options – either to finish me off or risk moving
with me in my condition. They argued.
Fortunately they decided the right way. Let’s
push him, if he dies on the way, blood will not be
on our hands. I was unconscious,” said
Tumwiine.
“Towards Lutta where Steven Kashaka was
commander, I woke up. Soldiers at the quarter
guard were crying. I told them I would survive.
The first treatment I got was helpful. In every
camp, I would get injections,” he added.
“Our people organized vehicles. We did not have
doctors. I needed an operation. They risked and
took me to Mulago.”NRA had woven a net of
contacts at Mulago hospital to treat wounded
fighters.
Dr Patrick Tumwiine was among NRA’s
collaborators. They had treated Mugisha Muntu
who had successfully returned to the bush.Dr
Tumwiine, Dr James Makumbi, Ruyombya,
Gwasaze (eye specialist), rushed the injured
Tumwiine to the theatre.
As Tumwiine was recuperating, a terrible incident
happened. “Due to excitement, as I was being
wheeled on a sickbed through the hospital
corridors, I loudly said, ‘we shall fight Obote.’
Gwennie Kategaya had just brought me a
mattress. She ran away for her life,’” recalled
Tumwiine.
Fearing Obote’s intelligence services would pick
clues about Tumwiine’s presence at Mulago, one
of the nurses decided to give him a sleeping
injection. “When I woke up, I was called
Rwakigundu. I created a story that I was driving
a Fiat car when robbers shot me. One of the
nurses was very interested in the story and came
to see me every day. Gwasaze said I was very
lucky. If the bullet had gone 1 millimeter up or
down in the head, I would have died,” recalled
Tumwiine.
Interestingly, doctors said, “we are the ones who
are lucky.” Doctors were happy to save him for
the good of the NRA war.
One of the guerrillas who visited Mulago to
check on Tumwiine was Benjamin Dampa.He
secretly sneaked in a pistol and encouraged
Tumwiine to hide it for his self defence. “This
might be dangerous. Anything could happen,”
said Tumwiine, rejecting the offer. Obote's
intelligence network was tipped that Tumwiine
was hospitalized at Mulago.
“I was always suspicious. So I got a tea kettle
for boiling water. I kept it near the next bed. I
would get a reflection of who came into the
room,” he recalled.
Indeed, Obote’s security got information after
arresting a driver who delivered Tumwiine to the
hospital. “The info leaked. Security services
wanted to check every bed. They used an
engineer who had lived with me at Lumumba
Hall, Makerere University,” said Tumwiine.
Disguised as an engineer carrying out some
works at the hospital, the man moved around the
facility in search of Tumwiine. Tumwiine would
use the reflection of the kettle to monitor the
man’s movements.
“He was a short and fat engineer. When I saw
him, I covered my face. I could see him through
my hankie. He didn’t see me. Info was sent to
our people that Obote’s men were looking for
me. The following day, NRA collaborator Moses
Kigongo was told that security were looking for
me. So, in the evening, we walked to his car in
the parking lot and left Mulago. Doctors came to
Rubaga hospital to treat me.”
On the way to Rubaga hospital, Kigongo bumped
into a roadblock at Nakulabye.“I saw a police
Officer I was training at Masindi. He would come
to my house. He is now retired. He was on this
roadblock. I covered my face. Kigongo said he
had a patient whom he was rushing to hospital,”
said Tumwiine.
At Rubaga, Tumwiine was suspicious of medics
attending to him. “There was one doctor whom I
knew from our days at Lumumba. I didn’t know
which side he belonged. I told him my story of
the attempted car robbery. After four days, he
came and said, “I know,’” which worried me.
After spending a week at Rubaga hospital,
Tumwiine told his colleagues, “Take me back to
the bush as I am." Kigongo organized and took
me back to the Bush. But I still had stitches all
over my face. The daring doctors followed me
from Kampala to the Bush to remove stitches.
On return, they almost fell in an ambush in
Matugga. They were told by people that security
were looking for their vehicle which had visited
Matugga. The doctors used ‘panyas’ to reach
Kampala.”
Back in the bush, Tumwiine was appointed head
of stores. After some time, NRA commanders
suggested that Tumwiine goes to Nairobi for
specialized treatment.
“I got bad headaches and had to go to Nairobi. I
found interesting things with NRA’s External
Committee. They had problems and could not
work together. We visited many of the members
after my operation in Nairobi,” said Tumwiine.He,
however, said the operation nearly took his life.
“The doctor tried to do local anesthesia instead
of inducing the whole body. In middle of
stitching, anesthesia was not working. I would
hear him tear through my skin. When I shouted,
he added another dose of anesthesia. He ended
up doing a wrong thing and had to go to Cuba for
another operation after we had come from the
bush,” said Tumwiine.
In Nairobi, Tumwiine, who now serves as
Security Minister, said he worked with the
External Committee to create a network of
supporters back home.
“We had contact at the Post Office. Our people
would ring without paying. These contacts were
in Entebbe and Libiri and the Lutwa government
did not know about this till the capture of
Kampala in 1986.”

Sunday, June 14, 2020

7 dead including 4 civilians in clashes between the DRC police and bandits in Lubumbashi today;14/06/2020

A total of 7 people, including 4 civilians, died in clashes between the elements of the police section Lubumbashi with a group of thugs in several areas of the capital of Haut-Katanga, on the night of the Saturday 13 to this Sunday, June 14, 2020.
According to the witnesses on the spot, it was around midnight that the exchange of shots between law enforcement and criminals with the Basembe, Gulf Plateau and GCAMIN neighborhoods in the municipality of Lubumbashi was heard.
It was at the crossing of the Djangwa and I avenue at the Golf District that these thugs enclaché their suspect movement before being pushed back by the patrol boats.
Another group of criminals operated on the Avenue (18th Plateau) in the Basembe neighborhood. On the spot, 3 bandits have died from the fire of the Loyalists, report our sources.
Another neighborhood visited by these out the same night is GCAMINE where 4 young people were shot.
" We found another body of a Bandit. Which makes a total of 3 dead among the improper. We regret the death of 4 young people who took care of the security of the GCAMINE neighborhood at night with vouvouzela to alert police in case of a suspect movement ", said Jeff Mbiya, member of civil society.
It should be noted that this record remains provisional, according to Captain Charles Esperanto Lwamba, who informs that the investigations are continuing.

Mighty Museveni recently fired the General Manager of Uganda Air Cargo Corporation (UAAC)

Mighty Museveni recently fired the General Manager of Uganda Air Cargo Corporation (UAAC), Eng Frank Kyankya, as sources revealed on this Sunday.
Uganda Air Cargo is a government entity supervised by the Defense and Veteran Affairs Ministry.
It provides travel bureau, air charter and cargo transport services.
Brigadier Richard Karemire said a new team of senior army officials has been put in place to run the institution.
“Engineer Fred Kyankya was relieved and replaced by Lt Gen Nakibus Lakara, the current AMISOM Deputy Force Commander in Charge of Operations,” said Brig Karemire.
“In the interim, Col Emanuel Kwihangana from Airforce, on 22 May 2020 took over office pending the return of Gen Lakara from Somalia,” he added.
Many army officers have been appointed onto this service sector.Lt Gen James Mugira, the Chief Executive Officer (CEO) of National Enterprise Corporation, the business arm of the armed forces, has been appointed to the Board.
The appointment of new management is aimed at providing efficient management to the strategic institution and also generate revenue for government.
The development comes at a time the president is firing high ranking officials from government institutions over corruption.
UACC last year asked Parliament for US$ 10 million (Shs 36.9 billion) to repair one of the two C130 aircrafts, which was grounded since 2014.
UPDF and other agencies use UACC’s services for mainly airlifting in critical rescue missions as well as troop rotation to Mogadishu, Somalia among other destinations within the region.

30 DRC army general officers equipped with all-terrain vehicles on instructions from the head of state (Min. From the defense meeting in kinshasha 13/06/2020)

At the 35th meeting of the Council of Ministers of National Defence and veterans Loved Ngoy I, at the 35th meeting of the Council of Ministers held Friday, June 2020, 12 by videoconference, confirmed that the situation is overall calm in 120 national.
However, Aimé Ngoy I drew the attention of the council to 25 other territories, making up the 3 areas of defence of concern, where armed band activism and rebel groups are disturbing the peace and security of citizens.
This situation, according to the report of the Board, led the Minister to make a multi-point plea in favour of FARDC social, as well as the strengthening of their operational capacity.
With respect to this last point, the Minister of Defense informed the Board that, on instructions from the President of the Republic, 30 general officers were equipped with all-terrain vehicles, and that they were grateful to the President of the Republic, Supreme Commander of FARDC.
For his part, the Deputy Prime Minister of the Interior and Security, Gilbert Kankonde, has said that a relative calm reigns throughout the National Territory, despite some highlights including the 100-day trial, the discontent against the at the 4th extension of the state of emergency, the return to the country of 38 Congolese released from prison in Uganda, the among members of the response team against the-19 about their bonuses.
The Deputy Prime Minister also reassured the advice that the Loyalists forces continue to hunt armed bands, especially in the eastern provinces of the National Territory, as well as urban banditry in several cities across the country.
With regard to the activism of local armed groups and incursions by the armed forces of some neighbours at the borders of the DRC, Gilbert Kankonde reassured the advice that FARDC were on maximum alert for all useful purposes.



......thanks for listening to my advice...........

DRC and Uganda ready to join forces to neutralize the armed groups.Thank you mighty Museveni for listening to me!!!


The precarious security situation in the eastern part of the country was mentioned during the 35th meeting of the Council of Ministers. Insecurity in the provinces of North Kivu and Ituri is at the root of instability in the sub-region.
In the search for stability in this part of the Great Lakes, the head of state, Félix Tshisekedi and his Ugandan colleague, Yoweri Museveni have had exchanges.
In his communication, the President of the Republic, Félix Tshisekedi made the economy of their interview to the members of the government: " It was agreed on the need for both of them to work actively towards the elimination of armed groups that sow destruction to the East of the country ", we read in the minutes of the 35 meeting of the Council of Ministers.
Both countries are waiting to base their strategy on an exchange of information: " They have agreed on a common strategy based not on the establishment of an integrated staff, but rather on strengthening the armed forces's intervention capacity of each country, especially through the exchange of information to deal with the armed groups under our study.



....For God and my country......






.........Thanks mighty museveni.....

Saturday, June 13, 2020

The DRC army has take over colonel makanika's strongholds;col makanika is among the ex FARDC officer behind a rumoured rebellion in South kivu

The military of the operational 2 South Kivu report to have taken over, this Saturday, June 13, 2020, the strongholds of Colonel makanika.
Positions located in the communities of Muranvia, Mugeti and Masata, in the group of bijombo, territory of Uvira, north of Minembwe (Fizi).
According to the army spokesperson in the area, Captain Dieudonné Kasereka, it has been for the past few days that this armed group has been trying to set up an aerodrome to allow him to receive reinforcements in order to continue to terrorise the population.
"Upon of the situation, FARDC have decided to destroy these positions from the enemies of peace", says Captain Kasereka.
He reassures that Colonel deserter makanika and his men are in a stampede in the forest and FARDC continue to chase them.
"The record of these clashes will be communicated in the right moment", he continues.
Operation Area Commander Sukola 2 South Kivu, brigadier general Gaby Boswane continues to ask the different local armed groups to drop the weapons.
A call for surrender to continue the process of Demobilization, Disarmament and Reintegration (DDR). Late this May;the population  had alerted FARDC of a rebellion in kivu.(read more here)  you can also  read  here about the plan by neighbouring countries like Rwanda in trying to balkanize DRC

15 years of forced labor required against Benjamin Wenga, DG of OVD for misusing funds meant for construction of Roads in North Kivu and south kivu.

The court closed the debates at on Friday, June 12th in the trial involving Fulgence Lobota Bamaros, Benjamin Wenga and Modest Makabuza, respectively, director-general of the National Road Maintenance Fund (FONER), the Office des Roads et Drainage ( OVD), and Congolese Society of Construction (SOCOC).
In front of the Kinshasa / Gombe Court of Appeal sitting in a fair chamber at the Central Prison of Makala, the public prosecutor required 15 years of forced labor to be charged on Benjamin Wenga. The same penalty was asked against Fulgence Bamaros. The prosecutor took half 15 years against Modest Makabuza.
All defendants have claimed their innocence pleading for their acquittal.
The cause is taken into consideration. The next hearing will be devoted to the judgement w which  is set at 23 June.
In concrete terms, they are accused of having overcharged the work related to a contract obtained by OVD, SOCOC and FONER. 32,5 kilometres of road should be rehabilitated in North Kivu and South Kivu provinces.

NRA HEROES :Rtd Brigadier Andrew lugobe lutaaya RO 0028


He may not have fought pitched battles but his auxiliary contribution to the war that brought NRA/M to power in 1986 is unrivalled, according to various veterans of the bush war.
There are moments when the survival of the struggle depended entirely on RO 028 Brig. Rtd. Andrew Lugobe Lutaaya. One such moment was during the National Resistance Army’s (NRA) first attack on Kabamba Military Training School on February 6, 1981 which effectively launched the five-year bush war.
Not only did he get the Mercedes Benz truck that carried the fighters, but he drove them himself and delivered the 27 guerrilla fighters at Kabamba for their first hit. The rebels used two vehicles in this attack.
Andrew Lutaaya carried 27 fighters while five others, including 2nd Lt Sam Magara, followed in a pick-up truck with rebel leader Yoweri Museveni. After a meeting at Mathew Rukikaire’s residence in Kampala, Lutaaya drove the truck all the way to Kabamba.
Near the gate, he offloaded the squad which was tasked to deal with the quarter guard. Gen. Elly Tumwine, a Monduli trained Second Lieutenant at the time, was in charge of the quarter guard hit squad.
Lutaaya then drove inside the barracks to deliver another squad commanded by Julius Chihandae whose task was to destroy the Signal Centre. Lutaaya belonged to the Chihandae squad.
Veterans say that Lutaaya bravely and daringly drove the truck for about half a kilometre inside the barracks up to the Signal Centre. However, Tumwine botched up the attack after he prematurely shot a guard at the gate – alerting the unsuspecting government soldiers in the barracks.
In the ensuing panic, Chihandae was shot, reportedly by a fellow rebel. The rebels bundled their first casualty, Chihandae, onto their truck and Lutaaya drove off towards Kiboga. In Kiboga, Lutaaya smuggled Chihandae into the district hospital to receive his first treatment, almost a day after he was shot.
Veterans tell us that it is Lutaaya and the late Jackson Mule Muwanga, who actually reconnoitered Kiboga to establish safe areas where rebels would hide after the Kabamba attack.
Lutaaya, being the son of a Ssese Island chief, had a personal car, a VW Combi minibus, which he used during the Kiboga reconnaissance.
After he safely delivered the rebels and their casualty to Kiboga, Museveni dispatched him to Kampala to inform mainly members of the Uganda Patriotic Movement, his political party, that the war had begun.
Lutaaya was present during the final preparatory meeting at Mathew Rukikaire’s residence before the rebels set off to the bush.
Lutaaya had an extra advantage of knowing his way around Lake Victoria, an important link between the rebels, their financiers, and suppliers throughout the five-year war.
In his book, Uganda’s Revolution 1979-1986: How I saw it, Brig. Pecos Kutesa underlines Lutaaya’s contribution when he writes, “There are times when the struggle hinges on just one individual. In our situation everything depended on Lutaaya’s survival instincts and ingenuity”.
The particular incident Kutesa is talking about happened in December 1981 when Museveni and his guards, who included Pecos Kutesa, were returning to the bush from Nairobi. The other Museveni guards were Arthur Kasasira and Marius Katungi, a.k.a Suicide.
In fact Lutaaya, because of his role, had been co-opted on the journey as one of the guards. Even Museveni writes about it in his autobiography, ‘Sowing the Mustard Seed’. Andrew Lutaaya was probably more important during the journey than anybody else.
Museveni left the jungles of Luwero in June 1981. It is Lutaaya who guided him all the way to Ssese Islands. On the island, Museveni and his guards were fed by a friend of Lutaaya. The following day, Lutaaya using his other friends, carried the group in a canoe across the lake to Kenya.
On arrival, he went hunting for Amama Mbabazi and Sam Katabarwa to receive the rebel leader and his guards. Museveni was needed in Nairobi to discuss a merger with Prof. Yusuf Lule and also to travel to Libya to beg for guns as well as check on his family.
Lutaaya’s role during the return journey was even more crucial six months later. The group faced difficulties when the engine of the boat developed mechanical problems. That was not scary when compared to sneaking back into the bush.
Lutaaya left Museveni, Pecos Kutesa and company at an island to go and look for a vehicle that would carry them to the bush. The rebel leader and his group panicked when he delayed to return. They feared that if Lutaaya had been arrested, they would be finished.
He eventually returned and joined them. The group was later driven to the bush in two vehicles by Hajji Moses Kigongo and Sale Male.
Because of the secrecy involved in Museveni’s movements, sometimes only two or three people would be informed. Lutaaya was one of the few who would know in advance that the rebel leader would travel from the bush to Nairobi and back. The second person was Mathew Rukikaire who headed the external wing.
Museveni, therefore, was always at Lutaaya’s mercy, according to a senior veteran.
Lutaaya continued to move between the bush and the urban areas, given his knowledge of the city and Buganda areas. Almost everybody from the bush who traveled to Kenya did so with the help of Lutaaya.
"It is him who carried both people and supplies". Brig. Matayo Kyaligonza recalls when Lutaaya sent the rebels a radio and transmitter from Nairobi. The communication equipment was received by Kyaligonza’s wife in Kampala for onward delivery to the rebels.
Kyaligonza also recalls a time when he traveled with Lutaaya from Nairobi to Liberia to beg for guns. The canoes and boats that Lutaaya mobilised to help cross the vast Lake Victoria were baptised the “NRA marine unit”. The most famous riders in these canoes who feature in both Museveni and Kutesa’s books on the war are Paddy and Busagwa.
Together with Lutaaya, the canoe boys linked the bushmen with the outside world. They would deliver both human beings and equipment to and from the bush using their canoes. This “NRA marine Unit” carried Museveni to Kenya and back on two different occasions as he traveled abroad.
Lutaaya is one of the 15 soldiers that are listed in the UPDF Act 2005 second schedule as having been senior officers when the NRA rebels captured power on January 26, 1986.

Ugandan authorities released a total of 17 Congolese fishermen who were sentenced to heavy sentences before receiving a presidential pardon.

Ugandan authorities released a total of 17 Congolese fishermen who were sentenced to heavy sentences before receiving a presidential pardon.
The interim administrator of the Mahagi territory, who confirms the information , says that he welcomed these compatriots who spent several months in prison, specifying that some are from Aru and Mahagi in Ituri and others from Rutshuru in North Kivu .
Gilbert Unencan adds that pending the decision of the provincial authorities, health measures against the COVID-19 pandemic have been taken, the 17 fishermen having been placed in segregation for medical follow-up.
Arrested on the waters of Lake Albert shared between the DRC and Uganda, these Congolese have received a presidential pardon from President Yoweri Museveni after intense diplomatic negotiations between the two states.

Friday, June 12, 2020

An AK 47 and ammunitions recovered from a home suspected of habouring armed bandits in mobgwabilu 85 km from bunia


The incident took place around 9 am in the Depot district, avenue Goli in the rural commune of Mogbwalu, located more than 85 km from Bunia, capital of the province of Ituri.
The mayor of this commune Jean-Pierre Bikilisende, who gives an assessment of this attack, indicates that four people were arrested, another injured and an AK47 weapon with ammunition recovered as well as several other goods.
"[...] Another one managed to climb to the ceiling, they realized that he was looking for a weapon and it was then that there was an exchange of fire. The police fired on it and the gentleman fell from the ceiling and another came out ;
Following this search, a total of four people were arrested, an AK-47 weapon recovered with several other military effects.
"We managed to arrest four people and after the search of the police, he was found in this house, an AK47 weapon with a magazine and four ammunitions, suspected elements  may be hiding  within the population .
Mr. Bikilisende called on the population in his jurisdiction to be vigilant about security and to denounce any civilian person holding weapons while recalling that only the police and the military are authorized by law to bear arms.
The commune of Mungwalu, a mining entity whose main activity is the artisanal exploitation of gold, underwent last April, an attack by the assailants of CODECO which had killed three civilians, 1 police officer and three militiamen neutralized.