Wednesday, 8 April 2015

APRIL 8 in History: Amin flees Kampala in 1979



TODAY IN HISTORY
1681 Apr 8, England's King Charles II received the 1st installment of a 5-million livre subsidy from King Louis of France. This provided him independence from Parliament and he ruled without it until his death in 1685.
1795 Apr 8, The Prince of Wales, later England’s King George IV, married his German cousin, Caroline, to produce an heir and increase his income. On their wedding night the drunken bridegroom spent the night "under the grate, where he fell, and where I left him." The story is told by Flora Fraser in her book: "The Unruly Queen: The Life of Queen Caroline." Masterpiece Theater made a TV presentation in 1997.
1879 Apr 8, Milk was sold in glass bottles for the 1st time.
1953 Apr 8, Jomo Kenyatta convicted of involvement with Mau Mau and sentenced to 7 years in Kenya
1979 Apr 8, Liberation war. Tanzanian and UNLA forces close in on Entebbe, as Idi Amin reported to have fled Kampala.
https://www.wikizero.com/en/Battle_of_Entebbe
 http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Uganda%E2%80%93Tanzania_War
1994 Apr 8, In Rwanda Jean Kambanda was appointed prime minister of the interim government. He went on radio and urged fellow Hutus to abuse, hurt and kill Tutsis and Hutu moderates. He pleaded guilty in 1998 to charges that he incited the slaughter of over 800,000 Rwandans.
1994 Apr 8, In Rwanda more than 1,400 Tutsis were massacred by Hutu militia at a church atop a hill in Kesho.
1994 Apr 8, About this time the commander of UN forces in Rwanda warned Kofi Annan, head of the UN Peacekeeping operations, that the Kigali government was planning to slaughter Tutsis. Annan’s office ordered Gen’l. Romeo Dallaire of Canada not to protect the informant or to confiscate arms stockpiles. Annan later claimed that he lacked the military might and political backing to stop the slaughter of more than 500,000 people.
2001 Apr 8, 65th Golf Masters Championship: Tiger Woods wins, shooting a 272
Source http://www.timelines.ws and http://www.historyorb.com

Sunday, 1 February 2015

FEB 1, 1986: President Museveni swears in 12-man Cabinet


President Museveni swearing in on January 29
 Three days later, he swore in
his first cabinet

📌 TODAY IN HISTORY - FEBRUARY 1, 1986

✳️  President Museveni swears in first cabinet

✳️  Sworn in is Cabinet of 12 ministers, 22 NRC members

✳️ Finance Minister Prof. Ponsiano Mulema from DP is only one not part of NRM/NRA in cabinet


FROM THE ARCHIVES: Soon after taking over government, the National Resitance Movement named and swore in their first cabinet on Saturday February 1, 1986.

President Museveni presided over the inauguration of a cabinet of 12 men, and 22 members of the NRC, one of who was a woman.

The headline in the Los Angeles Times the next day, based on a wire story by AP, was "New Uganda Leader Swears In Cabinet' (CLICK TO READ STORY)


************ THE  FULL AP REPORT **********

KAMPALA, Uganda —  The new president of this East African nation, Yoweri Museveni, who took control of Uganda last weekend after an intermittent four-year guerrilla war, swore in a Cabinet and political council Saturday. He promised to lead “a government of freedom fighters.”

The inauguration of the 12 Cabinet ministers and 22 members of the National Resistance Council was held on the steps of Parliament, where empty cartridge shells still littered the courtyard.

Museveni has promised a broad-based, democratic government, but both the Cabinet and the council, which will function as Uganda’s legislative body, are dominated by members of his Uganda National Resistance Army, a rebel movement based in the south.

On Saturday, Museveni called for a halt to harassment of Ugandans from the north. He told a news conference that he had instructed government agencies to take legal action against “criminal elements” molesting northeners.

His remarks followed reports that northern Nilotic Acholi and Lango tribespeople, accused of atrocities against the Bantu of southern Uganda in recent months and years, had become victims of vengeful civilians.

That aside, only one member of the Cabinet, Finance Minister Ponsiano Mulema, was not part of Museveni’s guerrilla organization, and only one council member is from northern Uganda, the tribal homeland of most of the ousted military regime’s leaders.

Six council members wore uniforms. The rest appeared to be civilians, including one woman.

In a speech after the ceremony, Museveni drew cheers when he promised to quickly eliminate the roadblocks that proliferated in the Kampala area under the ousted regime of Gen. Tito Okello.

“The fascist mentality has spread so much in recent years,” he said. “The pride of Ugandans must be rekindled. Once you have that, you have an insurance policy against dictatorship.”

At an earlier news briefing Friday night, Museveni said the seeming imbalance in his Cabinet might be adjusted through appointments to still vacant seats, which include that of foreign minister.

However, presidential press secretary Ben Kanyangyeyo said: “We’re not looking for tribal balance on the Cabinet. We’re looking for people who can do the job.”

Museveni and Kanyangyeyo indicated that Uganda’s political parties would have no formal role in the immediate future under the National Resistance Army-led government.

Kanyangyeyo said elections might not be held for four years.

Thousands of soldiers of the ousted regime fled to northern Uganda, and NRA troops are pursuing them with the intent of controlling the entire country. Museveni said his forces now control the towns of Jinja and Tororo in the east and are approaching Karuma Falls after capturing Kigumba, in the western Masindi district.

RELATED VIDEO

Professor Finance Minister Ponsiano Mulema unveiling his first budget in 1986. (click to view). He was replaced in September 1986 by Dr Crispus Kiyonga.