Uganda Allow Military Tribunals to Accuse Civilians

Ugandan President Yoweri Museveni attends a session of the Russia-Africa summit in Saint Petersburg, Russia, July 28, 2023. Mikhail Tereshchenko/TASS Host Photo Agency via REUTERS/File Photo


June 16, 2025 Hour: 9:04 pm

Ugandan President Yoweri Museveni signed into law an amendment allowing military tribunals to try civilians under certain circumstances, the country’s parliament said on Monday. 

The Supreme Court had called such trials unconstitutional in a ruling earlier this year. Judges had argued that military courts were neither impartial nor competent to exercise judicial functions. 

The Ugandan parliament passed an amendment last month to address some of these issues, despite boycott from opposition lawmakers, who said the new bill violated the Supreme Court decision. 

Human rights activists have long accused the Ugandan government of using military courts to persecute opponents of the president.  

Yoweri Museveni has spent close to 40 years in power. His aides have denied rights groups’ accusations and said only civilians who use guns for political violence were prosecuted in such tribunals. 

“The law will deal decisively with armed violent criminals, deter the formation of militant political groups that seek to subvert democratic processes, and ensure national security is bound on a firm foundational base”, army spokesperson Chris Magezi wrote on X after the bill was passed in May.

Author: OSG

Source: EFE-Africanews