Tuesday, June 16, 2020

US Army Marks 245th Birthday: Its Top Ten Glorious Victories and Most Spectacular Defeats


On June 14, 1775, the Second Continental
Congress created the Continental Army from
militias fighting British forces in the
American Revolutionary War, with General
George Washington appointed its
commander in chief. From those humble
beginnings, for better or for worse, the US
Army would become one of the most
powerful militaries in the world.
The US Army is marking its birthday on
Sunday, with the White House issuing a
commemorative tweet, and the Army
releasing a bland recruitment video. The
Pentagon, meanwhile, solemnly marked the
occasion with a wreath laying ceremony at
Arlington National Cemetery, where over
400,000 soldiers from the Civil War to
America’s many foreign wars are buried. In
honour of the occasion, Sputnik recalls ten
of the Army’s most amazing triumphs and
most humiliating defeats.
Today, we recognize 245 years of bravery,
commitment, skill and answering the call to
serve.
We are America's Army. #ArmyBday
#ServeWithHonor pic.twitter.com/
skfWN16XpP
— U.S. Army (@USArmy) June 14, 2020
LIVE: @USArmy leaders commemorate the
Army’s 245th birthday with a wreath-laying
ceremony at @ArlingtonNatl . https://t.co/
zTzMNm4TvW
— Department of Defense 🇺🇸
(@DeptofDefense) June 14, 2020
1: Revolutionary War
Undoubtedly the most important of the many
battles that would follow it, the Army’s
performance in the Revolutionary War of
1775-1783 was perhaps its most spectacular
victory, with the militia-turned-soldiers from
13 British colonies in North America banding
together under General George Washington’s
leadership and ousting the British, at the
time the largest and most powerful empire in
history. With a little help from French and
Spanish forces, as well as American Indian
allies, the US Army of 200,000 men total
was able defeat some 48,000 Redcoats, the
Royal Navy, and some 25,000 British
loyalists who took up arms, and establish
the American republic. In 1783, the United
States and Great Britain signed the Treaty of
Paris, and London formally recognized
Washington’s status as a sovereign nation.
2: War of 1812
In 1812, with Britain and its allies busy
fighting Napoleon in Europe, the US declared
war, attempting to annex British holdings in
North America (i.e. Canada). Both sides
proved unprepared for the conflict, with
American men who eagerly took up arms to
throw off the yoke of the British three
decades earlier unenthusiastic about signing
up to fight in a war of aggression. British
Canada, meanwhile, was defended by just
over 6,000 men. The war quickly turned into
a war of position along the vast borders
between the US and Canada, with most of
the fighting taking place in the Great Lakes
region, along with a naval campaign in the
Atlantic which included a blockade of the US
East Coast. Possibly the most memorable
event for both sides was the successful
redcoat amphibious invasion of Washington,
DC, and the burning of the White House in
August 1814. The conflict would claim some
15,000 American and 10,000 British and
Loyalist lives, and end in a stalemate.
Strategically, however, this was a defeat for
the US Army, which failed to make
Washington politicians’ dreams of conquering
North America a reality. In 1814, the warring
parties signed the Treaty of Ghent, with no
territorial changes made.
Battle of Queenston Heights, painting
by James B. Dennis.
3: Mexican-American War
In 1846, a year after the Republic of Texas’s
annexation by the United States, a territorial
dispute between the US and Mexico turned
into a full-blown war. The war ended in a
major victory for the US Army, with Mexico
ceding over 1.3 million square km of territory
from the Rio Grande River to the Pacific
Ocean at the cost of ‘just’ 1,700 US and
5,000 Mexican troops. The Mexican-
American War set the stage for turning the
US into a true continental economic and
military power.
4: Civil war.
US Army 'Open to Discussion' on
Renaming Bases Currently Honouring
Confederate Leaders
In the early to mid-1860s, the United States
would wage what remains the deadliest
conflict in American history – the Civil War,
which saw Army forces loyal to the Union
fight it out with the secessionist Confederate
States of America between 1861 and 1865.
The conflict had several causes, with slavery
at the center, with the North seeking to
abolish it while wealthy landowners in
southern states sought to keep it). The war
saw a series of bloody campaigns from
Texas and Arizona to the Mississippi River,
Kentucky, Virginia and the Carolinas, with
365,000 Union Army troops, and 290,000+
Confederate Army and militia, perishing in
the conflict. All told, the war caused as
many as a million deaths, or 3 percent of
America’s entire population at the time. The
war ended in April 1865, when Confederate
General Robert E. Lee Surrendered to
General Ulysses S. Grant at the Battle of
Appomattox Court House in Virginia. The
collapse of the Confederacy led to the
freeing of four million black slaves.
Battle of Antietam, charge of the Iron
Brigade. Painting by Thure de
Thulstrup.a
5: World War I
On April 6, 1917, two and a half years after
the beginning of the Great War, Washington
entered the conflict after a year-long
propaganda campaign by the Wilson
administration to convince mostly pro-
neutrality Americans to see the need to join
the British and French-led conflagration
against the Central Powers of Germany,
Austria-Hungary and the Ottoman Empire.
More than anything, the US Army’s
contribution to the war was as a morale
builder to relieve the exhausted Western
allies, particularly after the Russian
Revolution and Russia’s exit from the war in
March 1918. Militarily, the US troops helped
blunt the German Spring Offensive of March
1918, and took part in the August-November
1918 series of attacks against Germany and
Austro-Hungary. Militarily, however, US
commanders’ tactics were just as horrific as
those of their French, British and German
counterparts, with 53,400 of the 4 million+
troops mobilized killed, many of them sent
into the meat grinder of trench warfare to
be cut down and bled white in frontal
assaults on enemy machinegun
emplacements.

6: US Intervention in the Russian Civil
War
The US military intervention in the Russian
Civil War is an important but little-talked
aspect of the wider conflict between the
‘White’ forces, their Western financial and
political backers, and the fledgling Bolshevik
government in territories from the Baltic and
the Black Sea all the way to the shores of
the Pacific. In September 1918, the United
States landed some 5,000 troops in
Arkhangelsk, northern Russia in what would
become known as the ‘Polar Bear
Expedition’. 8,000 more troops had already
been deployed in Vladivostok a month
earlier. The US joined troops from over half
a dozen other nations to try and stop the
Reds’ takeover of Russia, but, in the end,
proved unsuccessful, with American forces
withdrawing from Arkhangelsk in July 1919,
and from Vladivostok in 1920. During their
deployment, the troops were tasked with
guarding local communications lines and
railways, transporting goods out of the
country as ‘compensation’ for their presence
and, occasionally, clashing with the Red
Army. All told, the US forces lost 424 men in
northern Russia, and 328 more in the Far
East. The failed intervention in the Russian
Civil War proved one of the contributing
factors to Moscow’s distrust of Washington
and other Western nations for much of the
remainder of the 20th century.
7: World War II
In December 1941, after Japan attacked
Pearl Harbor, and Hitler declared war on the
USA, Washington joined the Second World
War, which to date remains the bloodiest
conflict in human history. The US Army
joined with the Navy and Air Force in
fighting in the North African, European and
Pacific theatres, helping to liberate North
Africa from Italian and German occupation in
1943, engaging in an island-hopping
campaign in the Pacific starting in 1942
after a series of naval engagements, and, in
1943 and 1944, landing troops in southern
Italy and France, opening up the Western
Front long awaited by the Soviets in the
east. The Second World War cost the US
407,000 military dead, with 318,000 of them
Army and Air Force men, but also helped
establish America as an undisputed
superpower in the post-war world, a status it
continues to enjoy today.

8: Korea

In June 1950, following months of escalating
tensions between North and South Korea,
Pyongyang declared war on Seoul, starting
what would become a three-year-long US-led
war against North Korea, Communist China,
and, unofficially, Soviet fighter pilots. After
being exhausted to the point of near defeat
in the first two months of the conflict, US
and allied forces launched an amphibious
invasion at Incheon, near Seoul, driving
through North Korea to the Yalu River border
with China. However, in October 1950,
Chinese forces entered the war, driving the
US and its allies back to the 38th parallel,
near to where the war began. By 1951, the
conflict turned into a war of position, and an
armistice treaty was signed in 1953. Over
1.7 million Americans took part in the war,
with 36,500 troops losing their lives, and
100,000 more receiving injuries. The war
prevented the defeat of Washington’s puppet
South Korean ally, but also shattered the air
of invisibility behind the US armed forces
that emerged after the Second World War. It
was also the Korean War that saw the US
make the shift to an air power-heavy military
doctrine, with US carpet bombing destroying
nearly three quarters of North Korea’s
population centers, and dropping more
bombs on the country than during the entire
Pacific Theatre of WWII.
9: Vietnam

In 1964, using the false flag Gulf of Tonkin
incident as a pretext, President Lynden
Johnson justified direct US entry into the
war in Vietnam, a conflict which would claim
the lives of some 58,000 US servicemen,
wound 150,300 others and become
America’s fourth deadliest war. By any
measure, the Vietnam War was a defeat for
the US Army, and all other branches of the
military, with the Pentagon failing to achieve
any of its strategic goals (stopping
communism in Southeast Asia, preserving
the regime in Saigon, defeating the North
Vietnamese). On the ground in Vietnam, the
US faced off against both North Vietnamese
forces and fanatical Viet Cong militia, and
the war quickly expanded into neighbouring
Laos and Cambodia. Between 1965 and
1975, the US Air Force dropped over three
times more bombs on Vietnam, Laos and
Cambodia than the total dropped by the
Allies during the Second World War. The US
suspended all combat operations in January
1973, withdrawing all forces by March of
that year. Two years later, in April 1975,
communist Vietnamese forces took Saigon,
and the war was over. The Vietnam War
severely damaged the reputation of the US
armed forces at home amid the rise of a
massive anti-war protest movement, and a
shaken Pentagon.
10: War on Terror
Following the 9/11 terror attacks in
Washington, New York and Pennsylvania, the
United States began the largest military and
security operation in the modern era, known
as the War on Terror, with the US Army
playing an active role in this fight. In late
2001, the US intervened in Afghanistan,
toppling the Taliban government only to
spend the next two decades engaging a
slow-burning insurgency. In 2003, the Bush
administration used the pretext of the War
on Terror to kick off the War in Iraq, another
conflict where the US Army easily defeated
the enemy army, only to get bogged down in
deadly and costly counterinsurgency
operations, culminating in the rise of Daesh
(ISIS) terrorists in 2014. The War on Terror
is a truly global conflict, with US forces
intervening in conflicts in Pakistan, Syria,
Libya, West Africa, East Africa, Yemen, and
the Philippines. By late 2018, the war was
estimated to have killed over 507,000
people, including nearly 4,500 US troops in
Iraq, and 2,200 in Afghanistan, with 50,000
more injured. Furthermore, despite President
Trump’s campaign pledge to stop being the
‘policeman of the world’ , the war has yet to
end, costing over $6 trillion to date.

Monday, June 15, 2020

Israeli Intelligence Reportedly Working to Soothe Sunni States’ Opposition to Bibi’s West Bank Plans

The Netanyahu government plans to ‘apply
sovereignty’ to large chunks of the West
Bank, including the Jordan Valley, on 1 July.
The Palestinian Authority, Hamas, Israel’s
moderate Arab neighbours, Russia and the
European Union have all warned Tel Aviv
against the move.
Mossad chief-turned covert diplomat Yossi
Cohen is planning a whirlwind trip across the
Middle East to quietly meet with moderate
Sunni Arab leaders to personally try to
convince them to temper their opposition to
Israel’s plans to take control over about a
third of the West Bank, the Jerusalem Post
has reported .
Cohen, known for his quiet diplomacy,
reportedly already travelled to Egypt late last
month to meet with senior Egyptian
government and intelligence officials to
discuss Israel’s West Bank plans and the
Palestinians’ possible reaction.
Before that, Cohen travelled to Qatar, and
established contacts with Saudi Arabia other
Gulf states. Only two Arab nations – Egypt
and Jordan, enjoy normalised diplomatic
relations with Tel Aviv, while neighbours
Syria and Lebanon, as well as Iraq, the Gulf
nations, Libya and others have yet to do so
following multiple Arab-Israeli wars and
disagreements over the treatment of the
Palestinians.
Multiple countries have now warned
Netanyahu against moving forward with his
West Bank plans. Late last week,
Luxembourg Foreign Minister Jean Asselborn
called the plans “a gross violation of
international law” and suggested that the EU
should recognise Palestinian statehood in
response. Before that, German Foreign
Minister Heiko Maas travelled to Israel
personally to warn officials that there would
be “consequences” if the Jewish State
moved forward. More than a dozen Western
embassies sent notes of protests to the
Israeli government, saying that if
implemented, Israel’s initiative would destroy
the chances of regional peace, and harm Tel
Aviv’s standing before the rest of the world.
Russia, for its part, has indicated that it
would see annexation as “a very dangerous
development” which would “cross out the
prospects of a Palestinian-Israeli settlement
and provoke a new round of violence.”
Jordan has warned that it would be forced
to reconsider the 1994 peace treaty with
Israel, while Palestinian Authority President
Mahmoud Abbas has said that East
Jerusalem will no longer be found by
agreements with Israel and the US, including
those related to security matters. The United
Arab Emirates, meanwhile, says annexation
would undermine broader Arab-Israeli
rapprochement beyond the Palestinian issue.
Netanyahu has vowed to move forward with
the initiative, with the Trump administration
pledging its support. On Sunday, on
President Trump's 74th birthday, the Israeli
prime minister announced that "practical
steps" were being taken to move forward
with the construction of the so-called
'Trump Heights' settlement in the Israeli-
occupied Syrian Golan Heights.he Netanyahu government plans to ‘apply
sovereignty’ to large chunks of the West
Bank, including the Jordan Valley, on 1 July.
The Palestinian Authority, Hamas, Israel’s
moderate Arab neighbours, Russia and the
European Union have all warned Tel Aviv
against the move.
Mossad chief-turned covert diplomat Yossi
Cohen is planning a whirlwind trip across the
Middle East to quietly meet with moderate
Sunni Arab leaders to personally try to
convince them to temper their opposition to
Israel’s plans to take control over about a
third of the West Bank, the Jerusalem Post
has reported .
Cohen, known for his quiet diplomacy,
reportedly already travelled to Egypt late last
month to meet with senior Egyptian
government and intelligence officials to
discuss Israel’s West Bank plans and the
Palestinians’ possible reaction.
Before that, Cohen travelled to Qatar, and
established contacts with Saudi Arabia other
Gulf states. Only two Arab nations – Egypt
and Jordan, enjoy normalised diplomatic
relations with Tel Aviv, while neighbours
Syria and Lebanon, as well as Iraq, the Gulf
nations, Libya and others have yet to do so
following multiple Arab-Israeli wars and
disagreements over the treatment of the
Palestinians.
Multiple countries have now warned
Netanyahu against moving forward with his
West Bank plans. Late last week,
Luxembourg Foreign Minister Jean Asselborn
called the plans “a gross violation of
international law” and suggested that the EU
should recognise Palestinian statehood in
response. Before that, German Foreign
Minister Heiko Maas travelled to Israel
personally to warn officials that there would
be “consequences” if the Jewish State
moved forward. More than a dozen Western
embassies sent notes of protests to the
Israeli government, saying that if
implemented, Israel’s initiative would destroy
the chances of regional peace, and harm Tel
Aviv’s standing before the rest of the world.
Russia, for its part, has indicated that it
would see annexation as “a very dangerous
development” which would “cross out the
prospects of a Palestinian-Israeli settlement
and provoke a new round of violence.”
Jordan has warned that it would be forced
to reconsider the 1994 peace treaty with
Israel, while Palestinian Authority President
Mahmoud Abbas has said that East
Jerusalem will no longer be found by
agreements with Israel and the US, including
those related to security matters. The United
Arab Emirates, meanwhile, says annexation
would undermine broader Arab-Israeli
rapprochement beyond the Palestinian issue.
Netanyahu has vowed to move forward with
the initiative, with the Trump administration
pledging its support. On Sunday, on
President Trump's 74th birthday, the Israeli
prime minister announced that "practical
steps" were being taken to move forward
with the construction of the so-called
'Trump Heights' settlement in the Israeli-
occupied Syrian Golan Heights.

After the bilatera meeting between DRC and south sudan at Kengezi base over SPLA army attrocities on DRC land;the administrator of Aru territory calls Congolese to disassociate themseselves south sudanese who attack and loot .

In an exclusive interview on Sunday, June 14, 2020, the administrator of the Aru territory invites the population of the chiefdoms of Kaliko-omi and Kakwa to dissociate themselves from the South Sudanese population who have taken refuge in these entities and who tend to continue the attacks against the army of their country.
Venant Nkosi also calls on the same population to facilitate the census, which will be announced in a few days to identify who is Congolese and who is Sudanese.
"First I ask the people of the chiefdoms of Kakwa and Kaliko to dissociate themselves from the South Sudanese who have the spirit to return home to go and provoke government force, to be able to facilitate the census that we are going to carry out to find out who is Congolese, and who is not ”confided the territorial authority in remarks collected by buniaactualite.com
Meanwhile, local sources report an exchange of fire between the FARDC and the soldiers of South Sudan, the SPLA this Saturday, June 13, 2020 in Karagba more than 7km from the border between the two countries.
This new incident comes just one day before a bilateral meeting held at Kengezi-base, between South Sudan and the DRC with the aim of bringing peace between the two countries.
The Congolese delegation was led by the administrator of the Aru territory, located in the far northeast of the DRC, accompanied by two elected deputies from the region, it was Friday, June 12, 2020.
According to witnesses, South Sudanese soldiers justify their numerous incursions by the presence among the refugees settled not far from the border, of rebel combatants who carry out attacks in their country from the Congo.
In recent weeks, several cases of the crossing of loyalist soldiers from South Sudan have been reported in several villages of the DRC, indulging in scenes of looting, burning of houses and rapes according to local civil society.

6 dead in another alleged ADF rebel attack in Mukondi,BENI


6 people were killed and 9 more missing with some fifty houses burned. This is the provisional record recorded following an invasion of the alleged ADF rebels on the morning of this ended Sunday, June 14, 2020 in the village of Mukondi, located on the Eringeti-Kainama axis in Beni (North Kivu) .. A FARDC military officer was injured during this attack.
This review is delivered by Governor's delegate official to Kainama, Muhindo Didis Issaya.
" It was around 4 pm that the enemy popped up in the village before going after the victims.They also burned houses and robbed shops before escaping ", he said.
Again, the inhabitants fled the area and headed to Eringeti and the other to Kainama.
This rebel attack took place in the day after another that cost the lives of at least 4 other civilians in Kekelibo, in the territory of Beni.

NRAHEROES SERGEANT KIFULUGUNYU (R.I.P)


He was known for composing morale boosting songs during NRA bush war and his major role was to entertain fighters.
On November 3, 1978, the Ugandan army blew up the Kagera Bridge at the start of the Uganda-Tanzania war. After the Ugandan forces had withdrawn from Tanzania – having occupied her territory for about 30 days - Idi Amin ordered for retreat back to Uganda. In order to curtail the movement of Tanzanian troops advancing into Uganda, they decided to destroy the Kagera Bridge. Kifulugunyu was in the Malire Mechanised Specialised Reconnaissance Regiment (MMSRR) which had some of the best tank squadrons; and so witnessed and “participated” in the blowing up of the German-built Kagera Bridge.
“The jet bombers failed to destroy the bridge. So they brought experts from Kilembe Mines. It’s them who blew it.”
“When they arrived, they entered the water, to assess the foundation of the bridge. We were a group of four soldiers holding a rope tied around each explosive expert to prevent them from being swept away by the strong current of the river. From the basement of the bridge, the four experts connected detonators, which they pressed and the bridge was blown into pieces,” Kifulugunyu
“After that, it was all jubilation. Partying and wining started there and then up to Kampala. We were satisfied that the Tanzania army could not attack us since we had managed to destroy the bridge they would use to cross into Uganda.” They were, however, wrong. Tanzanian troops erected pontoon to cross into
Earlier in 1965 when Uganda went to support Congolese nationalist rebels led by Moishe Tshombe, Kifulugunyu was among the soldiers who participated in that war. In 1973, when the late Col Muammar Gaddafi of Libya invaded Chad, Kifulugunyu was also among the soldiers of fortune. Uganda had sent some soldiers to train in Libya in a Commando Course.
When the course ended, Col Gaddafi told them that they had finished the theoretical part of it, next was the practical work.
“We went to Chad. Gaddafi while addressing us alongside Libyan commandos said we were going for a mission and whoever comes back alive would be promoted. We managed to capture a whole strip in Chad,” Kifulugunyu recalls.
After the mission, they returned to Uganda and Kifulugunyu was sent to Iraq and later to former Union of the Soviet Socialist Republics for further training.
After the 1979 war, Kifulugunyu like all former Uganda army soldiers was imprisoned. But in 1980, he managed to escape with other ex-servicemen from Upper Maximum Security Prison, Luzira. For three years, he hid in Mubende District until 1984 when a one Kasinzi took him to the National Resistance Army (NRA) rebels. But on the day he arrived in the bush, Kifulugunyu was arrested. This was after he said he had been in the UA but had escaped from jail.
“They couldn’t believe my story. They thought I was a spy. And I was detained in a trench for two days. With my guitar, I started singing for the prisoners.” After two days, I was set free and made the OC Morale. I liked the title. I started calling myself OC “omuraaro”. My major role in the bush was to entertain fighters,” Kifulugunyu
In 2008, Kifulugunyu was retired from the national army after 44 years of service

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.