Day of the Imprisoned Writer 2020: Take Action for Kakwenza Rukirabashaija

Name: Kakwenza Rukirabashaija
Occupation: Novelist and journalist
Situation: On trial on one case; under investigation on another
#ImprisonedWriter #FreeKakwenza

Read Yann Martel’S Solidarity Letter To Kakwenza Rukirabashaija

Kakwenza Rukirabashaija is a Ugandan novelist and journalist. He is the author of The Greedy Barbarians, a novel which explores themes of high-level corruption in a fictional country. His new book, Banana Republic: Where Writing is Treasonous, was recently published. In this book, he recounts his experience, including torture by state security agents, while detained for seven days in April 2020. He was held under charges supposedly related to COVID-19, but interrogated about the contents of his novel. He was charged in court with the offence of ‘doing an act likely to spread the infection of disease...’ After failure of the state to appear before court to argue the case, a Chief Magistrate’s Court dismissed the case and discharged Rukirabashaija for non-appearance of the complainant.

He was arrested again on 18 September 2020 at his home in Iganga District, Kigulu County, by officers from the Ugandan Chieftaincy of Military Intelligence (CMI). He was illegally detained for three days in violation of Uganda’s law which requires that arrested persons be charged in court within 48 hours of their arrest. On Monday 21 September 2020, Rukirabashaija was released on a police bond, charged with the offence of ‘inciting violence and promoting sectarianism.’ The police bond requires Rukirabashaija to report to the police at the Special Investigations Unit at Kireka, 240km away from his home on a weekly basis to supposedly ‘answer to the charges’ for an indefinite period. He has reported that he and his family are constant targets of extrajudicial surveillance by individuals believed to be state security agents.

PEN International condemns the unlawful arrest, detention and ongoing harassment of Kakwenza Rukirabashaija and calls for all charges against him to be dropped immediately and unconditionally.

Take Action

  • Send an appeal to the Ugandan authorities

  • Tell others: share Kakwenza Rukirabashaija’s case and his work

  • Give to our Day of Imprisoned Writer appeal

  • Read Yann Martel’s solidarity letter to Kakwenza Rukirabashaija

Ask the authorities to:

  • Immediately and unconditionally drop the unjust charges against Kakwenza Rukirabashaija and stop all attacks against his legitimate right to freedom of expression;

  • Stop abuse of the rule of law and police powers to harass him simply because he criticises the regime in his writing and other peaceful expression;

  • Uphold Uganda’s regional and international human rights obligations to respect, protect and promote freedom of expression;

  • Impartially investigate reports of torture during his arrest and detention and hold the military or police officers found culpable to account;

  • Immediately return to Kakwenza Rukirabashaija’s property unlawfully held by state security agents;

  • Guarantee his personal safety and security

Sample tweet:

Drop unjust charges against Kakwenza Rukirabashaija and investigate torture allegations. #ImprisonedWriter #FreeKakwenza @KagutaMuseveni [or Twitter handles for other contacts below]

Yoweri Kaguta Museveni, President of the Republic of Uganda

Email: info@statehouse.go.ug

Tel: +256 414 231 900

Twitter: @KagutaMuseveni

Abel Kandiho, Director of the Chieftaincy of Military Intelligence (CMI)

Twitter: @UPDFspokespersn

Martin Okoth Ochola, Inspector General of Police

Email: info@upf.go.ug

Tel: +256 712 745 013

Twitter: @PoliceUg

William Byaruhanga, Attorney General

Tel: +256 230802/254829

Twitter: @MoJCA_UG

We encourage PEN members to continue to:

  • Publish articles and opinion pieces about this case and the state of freedom of expression in Uganda in your national or local press;

  • Share information about the harassment directed at Kakwenza Rukirabagaisha by the Ugandan state, and about your campaigning via social media; please use #ImprisonedWriter and #FreeKakwenza

  • Organise public events, press conferences and demonstrations.

Please let us know about your activities and actions. This helps us monitor the impact of our campaigning.

Sample tweet:

On Day of the #ImprisonedWriter join @PEN_Int and call for unjust charges to be dropped against Ugandan writer Kakwenza Rukirabashaija #FreeKakwenza [insert link]

Please share this graphic on Twitter, Facebook or Instagram to highlight Kakwenza’s case.



Imprisoned writers rely on PEN to advocate for their freedom and to defy those who want to silence them. From practical support for writers seeking asylum or in exile, to using our platforms to share their words, to putting pressure on the powerful – this work is only possible with your support.

Read Yann Martel’s solidarity letter to Kakwenza Rukirabashaija

Dear Kakwenza,

When I read what has happened to you, what continues to happen to you, I am appalled. Your offence has been to write. You line up words on a screen, only that. And what you did with the words in your novel The Greedy Barbarian, using the tools of fiction, was to point out the corruption poisoning your country. There can be no harm in that. Corruption is not good for anyone, not even for those who profit from it. Short-term, they do well, but their soul is poisoned. And the good ride at other people’s expense never lasts. Always, corruption corrupts its very survival, and then there is a price to be paid. Why be corrupt then? A well-functioning civil society that respects each and every citizen benefits everyone.

You write The Greedy Barbarian. Then what? On April 13, 2020, you are arrested by officers of the Ugandan military intelligence. Of course, you know all this. I am writing it down because other eyes will be reading this letter, and they must know, or they must be reminded. You are arrested, you are detained for seven days, in flagrant violation of Ugandan law, which requires that an arrested person be charged in court within 48 hours of their arrest, and during those seven days you are repeatedly interrogated and tortured, resulting in injuries that you are still dealing with seven months later.

And then you did it again. You wrote another novel, The Banana Republic, in which you recount your harrowing experience at the hands of those corrupt military officers. On September 18, 2020, you are once more arrested by the same officers of the Ugandan military intelligence. Once more, you are tortured. After three days, you are released. To top it off, you have been charged by the people who tortured you with “inciting violence and promoting sectarianism.” Do you think they see the irony in this charge? I don’t think so.

Dear Kakwenza, you are a brave man who has been heard. We know, here in Canada, what Ugandan authorities are doing to you. We know, and state here, that it is deeply unacceptable,n outrageous breach of the basic rights of every human being. It is my hope that bringing light to your case will save you from the dark, that one day soon you will be free and safe to write your novels and readers will be free and safe to read them. With respect and admiration,

Yann Martel
Author and PEN International’s Centenary Patron

Background

On 13 April 2020, Uganda writer and novelist Kakwenza Rukirabashaija was arrested at his home by officers from the Chieftaincy of Military Intelligence (CMI). He was detained for seven days before arraignment in court and informed his lawyers that he had been subjected to torture. Although he was charged with a covid19 related offence following a post he had made on his Facebook account, his interrogation centred on his novel, The Greedy Barbarians that explores themes of high-level corruption in a fictional country. PEN International issued a statement on 4 May 2020 highlighting his situation and calling on the Ugandan authorities to drop what seem to be false charges when in real sense Rukirabashaija was being targeted because of his writing. In the latest incident of arrest and unlawful detention, the arresting officers questioned him about his new book, Banana Republic: Where Writing is Treasonous although in official documents seen by PEN, the police strangely claim that Rukirabashaija is being investigated on a charge of ‘inciting violence and promoting sectarianism.’

PEN is gravely concerned about the physical safety and welfare of Rukirabashaija. He has informed his lawyers that he is still undergoing treatment for injuries he suffered during his detention in April 2020. Furthermore, state security agents continue to withhold his computer, cell phone and data storage bank although these are not included as exhibits in the court case against him.

Freedom of Expression in Uganda

Uganda has ratified the African Charter on Human and People’s Rights (ACHPR) and the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights (ICCPR), both of which guarantee the right to freedom of expression. The Constitution of Uganda also guarantees human rights, including the right to freedom of expression. All these commitments compel the authorities of the Republic of Uganda to respect the right to freedom of expression, including free speech. Despite these commitments, Ugandan authorities have a long history of failure and outright refusal to comply with the country’s international human rights standards on the right to freedom of expression, association, and assembly.

Misuse of state security agencies and abuse of rule of law to silence dissenting voices in rampant. It is not uncommon for critical voices, particularly writers, journalists, human rights defenders, political opposition activists, artistes, university students and academics, and others peacefully protesting unjust actions by government and state officials to be subjected to arbitrary arrest and detention; acts of brutality, including torture and malicious prosecution.

Use of repressive laws, particularly the Public Order Management 2013 and the vaguely worded Computer Misuse Act 2011 are frequently applied by the authorities to crack down on critics of the Uganda government. Despite numerous appeals to the Uganda authorities by national and international human rights groups to repeal sections of these laws that negate Uganda’s international human rights commitments and obligations, the authorities have continued to ignore these calls.

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Day of the Imprisoned Writer 2020: Take action for Sedigeh Vasmaghi

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PEN Resolution on Freedom of Expression in the Time of COVID-19