Uganda's Police Spokesperson Emilian Kayima speaks during a press
conference on April 28, 2018 in Kampala, following a joint Uganda Police
Force and Army overnight security operation targeting the Usafi Mosque.
AFP PHOTO | SUMY SADURNI
Ugandan police stumbled upon a "radicalisation centre" at a
Kampala mosque, shooting dead two people, arresting dozens and releasing
over 100 women and children, officials said Saturday.
A
security source, speaking on condition of anonymity, said officers had
found what appeared to be an Islamist radicalisation centre inside the
mosque.
The discovery came Friday as police offices
followed a suspect, believed to have been involved in a high-profile
kidnapping and murder earlier this year, into the city's Usafi Mosque.
During
an ensuing shoot-out, police said one officer was wounded, two men were
shot dead and 36 arrested and accused of hoarding weapons.
Also inside the mosque were 18 women and 94 children that police said were being held against their will.
Kidnappings
"A number of children and women, suspected to either have been
kidnapped or held hostage, were rescued," police spokesman Emilian
Kayima told a press conference on Saturday.
"Two of the
hostage-takers were shot dead after violently attacking and severely
injuring one of the security officers," Kayima said, adding that the man
who police had followed into the mosque was taken into custody.
Investigations into the connection between the original suspect and those found inside the mosque were continuing.
The
arrested men — who police said were found with 23 machetes, 60 bullets
and a bow and arrow — are suspected of involvement in the kidnapping and
illegal detention of the women and children who come from various East
African countries.
In February, the body of Susan
Magara — a member of an influential Ugandan family — was found three
weeks after her abduction and a string of ransom demands.
The crime shocked Ugandans and president Yoweri Museveni ordered intelligence agencies to lead an investigation.
Security
forces believe that a key suspect who they had under surveillance
realised he was being followed and bolted into the mosque.
Interior
Minister Jeje Odong said officers chased the suspect into the mosque
and that the subsequent discovery of weapons, women and children was not
"planned or intended".
"If the suspect had not gone
into the mosque we would have had no reason to enter," Odong said. "We
take strong exception to places of worship being used to commit crime."
Odong
said the children discovered inside "looked scared and traumatised" and
appeared to be from Burundi, Rwanda and Kenya as well as Uganda.
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