Uganda’s opposition said that voting had been deliberately delayed in yesterday’s election, as Ugandan President Yoweri Museveni seeks to extend his 40-year rule amid an Internet blackout and a police crackdown.
Museveni, 81, is widely expected to win a seventh term in office thanks to his total control of the state and security apparatus. The former bush fighter faces a concerted challenge from singer-turned-politician Bobi Wine, 43, who styles himself the “ghetto president” after his stronghold in the slums of the capital, Kampala.
In many areas, voting had yet to start hours after polls were due to open as biometric machines — used to verify voters’ identity — were malfunctioning and ballot boxes were undelivered in several parts of Kampala and the nearby city of Jinja.
Photo: AFP
Some linked the problems to an Internet blackout imposed by the government on Tuesday despite repeated promises not to do so.
David Lewis Rubongoya, secretary-general of the opposition National Unity Platform, said he had traveled around the capital and that “no voting is taking place” in most places.
“Everything they are doing is a sham and it is deliberate,” he said.
By contrast, voting had begun on schedule near the military barracks at Summit View in Kampala, he said.
“There are technical issues; it is not at all polling stations,” presidential spokesman Faruk Kirunda said, adding that affected areas were moving to manual verification “and people are now allowed to vote.”
At a polling station on the outskirts of Kampala, voting began four hours late after officials had to switch to manual verification.
“They are trying to steal the poll,” said Respy, a woman in her 20s. “They are trying to make us get tired and go home.”
As with his 2021 campaign, hundreds of Wine’s supporters have been arrested in the run-up to the vote. He wore a flak jacket at rallies, describing the election as a “war” and Museveni as a “military dictator.”
“We are very aware that they are planning to rig the election, to brutalize people, to kill people, and they don’t want the rest of the world to see,” Wine said on the eve of election day.
The government said the Internet shutdown was needed to prevent the spread of “misinformation” and “incitement to violence,” but the UN called it “deeply worrying.”
Wine has vowed protests if the vote is rigged.
The other major opposition figure, Kizza Besigye, who ran four times against Museveni, was abducted in Kenya in 2024 and brought back to a military court in Uganda for a treason trial that is ongoing.
Many Ugandans still praise Museveni as the man who ended the country’s post-independence chaos and oversaw rapid economic growth, even if much was lost to a relentless string of massive corruption scandals.
Tens of thousands of Filipino Catholics yesterday twirled white cloths and chanted “Viva, viva,” as a centuries-old statue of Jesus Christ was paraded through the streets of Manila in the nation’s biggest annual religious event. The day-long procession began before dawn, with barefoot volunteers pulling the heavy carriage through narrow streets where the devout waited in hopes of touching the icon, believed to hold miraculous powers. Thousands of police were deployed to manage crowds that officials believe could number in the millions by the time the statue reaches its home in central Manila’s Quiapo church around midnight. More than 800 people had sought
DENIAL: Pyongyang said a South Korean drone filmed unspecified areas in a North Korean border town, but Seoul said it did not operate drones on the dates it cited North Korea’s military accused South Korea of flying drones across the border between the nations this week, yesterday warning that the South would face consequences for its “unpardonable hysteria.” Seoul quickly denied the accusation, but the development is likely to further dim prospects for its efforts to restore ties with Pyongyang. North Korean forces used special electronic warfare assets on Sunday to bring down a South Korean drone flying over North Korea’s border town. The drone was equipped with two cameras that filmed unspecified areas, the General Staff of the North Korean People’s Army said in a statement. South Korea infiltrated another drone
COMMUNIST ALIGNMENT: To Lam wants to combine party chief and state presidency roles, with the decision resting on the election of 200 new party delegates next week Communist Party of Vietnam General Secretary To Lam is seeking to combine his party role with the state presidency, officials said, in a move that would align Vietnam’s political structure more closely to China’s, where President Xi Jinping (習近平) heads the party and state. Next week about 1,600 delegates are to gather in Hanoi to commence a week-long communist party congress, held every five years to select new leaders and set policy goals for the single-party state. Lam, 68, bade for both top positions at a party meeting last month, seeking initial party approval ahead of the congress, three people briefed by
Indonesia and Malaysia have become the first countries to block Grok, the artificial intelligence (AI) chatbot developed by Elon Musk’s xAI, after authorities said it was being misused to generate sexually explicit and nonconsensual images. The moves reflect growing global concern over generative AI tools that can produce realistic images, sound and text, while existing safeguards fail to prevent their abuse. The Grok chatbot, which is accessed through Musk’s social media platform X, has been criticized for generating manipulated images, including depictions of women in bikinis or sexually explicit poses, as well as images involving children. Regulators in the two Southeast Asian