BFF-33 Uganda says Rwandan troops crossed border, killed two men

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UGANDA-RWANDA-UNREST

Uganda says Rwandan troops crossed border, killed two men

KAMPALA, May 25, 2019 (BSS/AFP) – Ugandan police on Saturday accused
Rwandan soldiers of entering its territory and killing two men, amid rising
tensions between the leaders of the two countries.

Relations between Rwanda’s Paul Kagame and Uganda’s Yoweri Museveni, once
close allies who backed each other into power, have turned deeply hostile in
recent months, with the pair trading accusations of espionage, political
assassinations and meddling in each other’s backyards.

Police said the alleged raid occurred around 8:00 pm (1800 GMT) on Friday
at a border post near the Ugandan village of Kiruhura in Rukiga district in
the west of the country.

Police spokesman Fred Enanga said the soldiers entered “about 80 metres
into Ugandan territory” in pursuit of a Rwandan who rode into his country on
a motorbike laden with goods from Uganda but made a U-turn on seeing the
soldiers.

“The victim resisted attempts to arrest him, and he was shot to the head
and killed instantly,” Enanga said, adding that a Ugandan who tried to
intervene was also shot dead.

The soldiers then retreated into Rwanda, he said.

“In this very instance, there was no justification for the illegal entry
and use of deadly force by the Rwandan military, due to the presence of
alternative, adequate and effective remedies available at our disposal,” he
said.

Rwandan officials were not available for comment.

The border is porous and traders often smuggle goods from Uganda into
Rwanda.

Rwanda has drastically reduced the quantity of imports from Uganda a few
months ago and its citizens are banned from crossing over to Uganda.

Uganda however has not imposed tit-for-tat measures.

Enanga said Rwanda must “avoid acts of provocation”. He said 44 Rwandans
had been intercepted illegally entering southwestern Uganda recently and had
been handed back in a “very peaceful manner.”

The row between the two strongmen risks dragging in their neighbours,
threatening economic integration and regional stability in an already
conflict-prone swathe of the continent.

The standoff escalated dramatically in March when Rwanda publicly accused
Uganda of abducting its citizens and supporting rebels bent on overthrowing
the government.

Museveni — who has admitted meeting, but not endorsing, anti-Kagame rebels
— harbours his own suspicions about his erstwhile ally. His officials have
accused Rwandans in Uganda of spying, and some have been detained by military
courts or deported.

BSS/AFP/ARS/2032 hrs