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Sexually assaulted and smeared in excrement: Uganda activist details torture in Tanzania
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Sexually assaulted and smeared in excrement: Uganda activist details torture in Tanzania
Stripped naked, beaten until she could no longer walk, sexually assaulted and covered in excrement: award-winning Ugandan activist Agather Atuhaire told AFP of the torture she suffered at the hands of security forces in Tanzania this week.
Atuhaire, who won an International Women of Courage Award from the United States last year, was arrested on Monday in Tanzania's business hub Dar es Salaam.
She had travelled there to support opposition leader Tundu Lissu, who is on trial for treason, facing a potential death penalty, ahead of elections in October.
Atuhaire was abandoned early Friday by Tanzanian agents near the Ugandan border after a brutal ordeal, she said.
"What happened in Tanzania stays in Tanzania," she said she was told. "We have videos of you."
Atuhaire was arrested along with Boniface Mwangi, a well-known rights activist from Kenya who also wanted to attend the trial.
Police told her: "Whites are sending you to destabilise our country," she told AFP in an interview in the Ugandan capital Kampala on Friday.
After being interrogated, Atuhaire and Mwangi were blindfolded and driven to an unknown location.
There, they took Mwangi out of the car and began beating him.
"He was screaming," said Atuhaire, adding that the agents had played gospel songs on the car radio, apparently trying to muffle the sound.
She says she was stripped naked, her hands cuffed to her ankles. She has injuries on her forearms and legs.
One of the Tanzanian officers then hit the soles of her feet "with all his might", while another inserted an object into her anus, she said.
"I had never known pain like that existed," she said.
"I don't remember which pain was worse," she added. "After that beating, I scream, I scream."
Then they smeared her body with excrement, she said.
The whole scene was filmed -- "to humiliate, instil fear but also silence you", she said.
"They are used to sexual abuse being something a victim is ashamed of. (But) I am not that victim... I am not the one who should be ashamed. You are the one who is committing a heinous crime, so you are the one who should be ashamed," Atuhaire said.
The US State Department said Saturday it was "deeply concerned" about the reports of mistreatment of Atuhaire and Mwangi, calling for "an immediate and full investigation".
Amnesty International also said the "torture and forcible deportation" of Mwangi and Atuhaire must be "urgently investigated".
AFP attempted to reach the Tanzanian government for comment, but there was no immediate response.
- 'Pain was unimaginable' -
Atuhaire, a lawyer and journalist, is a fierce critic of the government of Ugandan President Yoweri Museveni, who has ruled the country for almost 40 years.
Her work in exposing corruption as head of the Agora Centre for Research has earned her international recognition.
Tanzanian President Samia Suluhu Hassan said Monday foreign activists were attempting to "intrude and interfere" in the country's affairs.
She urged the security services "not to allow ill-mannered individuals from other countries to cross the line here".
Rights groups accuse Hassan of a brutal crackdown on the opposition ahead of the October elections.
Lissu's Chadema party has been banned from taking part after refusing to sign an electoral "code of conduct" without significant reforms.
The day after Hassan warned foreign activists, Atuhaire was still in detention and "couldn't step on the floor" due to the beatings on her feet, she said.
"The pain was unimaginable," she said, but her captors forced her to "get up and exercise".
In the following days, until her release, she says she was kept blindfolded, living in fear of what might happen next.
"We were both treated worse than dogs, chained, blindfolded and underwent a very gruesome torture," said Mwangi, struggling to walk, after he was released and had returned to the Kenyan capital Nairobi on Thursday.
"The situation in Tanzania is very bad. I think what happened to us is what happens to all Tanzanian activists," he said.
Atuhaire says she will file a complaint against Tanzania for the torture she suffered.
"For me, the need for justice supersedes anything, any feeling of shame, which I don't even feel," she told AFP.
"Of course it is difficult. I have physical pain. I am sure after that I'll deal with mental psychological pain. But I will not give anyone, any of these murderers, criminal organisations that we have as governments, the pleasure" of seeing her broken, she said.
burs-jf/er/rbu/jhb
B.Wyler--VB