
Ugandan activist arrested in Tanzania found ‘tortured' at border: rights group
KAMPALA: A Ugandan activist who was arrested and held 'incommunicado' in Tanzania after attempting to attend a treason trial for an opposition leader has been found at the Ugandan border with 'indications of torture,' a rights group said Friday.Ugandan activist and journalist Agather Atuhaire was arrested earlier this week alongside her Kenyan counterpart, Boniface Mwangi, a prominent campaigner against corruption and police brutality in Kenya.Atuhaire and Mwangi were among activists who went to Tanzania to show solidarity with opposition leader Tundu Lissu at the latest hearing of his treason trial on Monday.Ugandan rights group Agora Discourse posted on X on Friday that Atuhaire had been found.'She was abandoned at the border by Tanzanian authorities,' it said.Its co-founder Spire Ssentongo said that 'Agather is under the care of family and friends.''She was dumped at the border at night by the authorities and there are indications of torture,' Ssentongo added.Police in Tanzania initially told a Tanzanian rights group that Mwangi and Atuhaire would be deported by air.But Mwangi was also found abandoned on a roadside in northern Tanzania near the Kenyan border, according to the local newspaper Daily Nation.'We were both treated worse than dogs, chained, blindfolded and underwent a very gruesome torture,' Mwangi told reporters on his return to Nairobi.Tanzanian President Samia Suluhu Hassan said earlier this week that foreign activists would not be allowed to interfere in the country's affairs.She urged security services 'not to allow ill-mannered individuals from other countries to cross the line here.'
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Al Arabiya
2 hours ago
- Al Arabiya
UN sees ‘alarming' surge in Afghan families deported from Iran
The UN migration agency on Tuesday voiced concern over a surge in Afghan families deported from Iran, recording a more than two-fold increase in May from the previous month. There was a 'sharp rise in the forced return of Afghan nationals' from Iran in May, the International Organization for Migration (IOM) said in a statement, adding, 'Particularly alarming is a significant surge in the number of families being deported.'


Arab News
3 hours ago
- Arab News
UN says deadly attacks around Gaza aid sites ‘a war crime'
GENEVA: UN human rights chief Volker Turk said on Tuesday that 'deadly attacks' on civilians around aid distribution sites in the Gaza Strip constituted 'a war crime.' Rescuers in the Palestinian territory said Israeli fire targeting civilians near an aid distribution center in the southern city of Rafah killed 27 people on Tuesday, raising an earlier toll. It came after a similar incident on Sunday when rescuers said 31 people were killed at the same location, witnesses saying they had been on their way to collect aid. 'Deadly attacks on distraught civilians trying to access the paltry amounts of food aid in Gaza are unconscionable,' Turk said in a statement. 'For a third day running, people were killed around an aid distribution site run by the Gaza Humanitarian Foundation. This morning, we have received information that dozens more people were killed and injured.' The US-backed GHF is a recently formed group that Israel has cooperated with to implement a new aid distribution mechanism in Gaza. The United Nations does not work with the foundation because of concerns that it does not meet core humanitarian principles of neutrality, impartiality and independence. Turk called for a prompt and impartial investigation into each attack, and for those responsible to be held to account. 'Attacks directed against civilians constitute a grave breach of international law, and a war crime,' he said. 'Palestinians have been presented the grimmest of choices: die from starvation or risk being killed while trying to access the meagre food that is being made available through Israel's militarised humanitarian assistance mechanism. 'This militarised system endangers lives and violates international standards on aid distribution, as the United Nations has repeatedly warned.'


Asharq Al-Awsat
4 hours ago
- Asharq Al-Awsat
More Than 4 Million Refugees Have Fled Sudan Civil War, UN Says
The number of people who have fled Sudan since the beginning of its civil war in 2023 has surpassed four million, UN refugee agency officials said on Tuesday, adding that many survivors faced inadequate shelter due to funding shortages. "Now in its third year, the 4 million people is a devastating milestone in what is the world's most damaging displacement crisis at the moment," UN refugee agency spokesperson Eujin Byun told a Geneva press briefing. "If the conflict continues in Sudan, thousands more people, we expect thousands more people will continue to flee, putting regional and global stability at stake," she said. Sudan, which erupted in violence in April 2023, shares borders with seven countries: Chad, South Sudan, Egypt, Eritrea, Ethiopia, Central African Republic and Libya. More than 800,000 of the refugees have arrived in Chad, where their shelter conditions are dire due to funding shortages, with only 14% of funding appeals met, UNHCR's Dossou Patrice Ahouansou told the same briefing. "This is an unprecedented crisis that we are facing. This is a crisis of humanity. This is a crisis of ... protection based on the violence that refugees are reporting," he said. Many of those fleeing reported surviving terror and violence, he added, describing meeting a seven-year-old girl in Chad who was hurt in an attack on her home in Sudan's Zamzam displacement camp that killed her father and two brothers and had to have her leg amputated during her escape. Her mother had been killed in an earlier attack, he said. Other refugees told stories of armed groups taking their horses and donkeys and forcing adults to draw their own family members by cart as they fled, he said.