Ugandan parliamentarians are to receive armoured escorts and
snipers to protect them, the president ordered in a letter seen
Thursday, after a ruling party lawmaker was shot dead last month.
President
Yoweri Museveni ordered that military "sharp-shooters" and a "fleet" of
armoured pick-up trucks would be put at the disposal of MPs who, he
said in a directive to the finance ministry, were being "singled out"
for attacks.
The order follows the shooting of MP
Ibrahim Abiriga as well as the unsolved murders of other prominent
individuals in recent years, among them government prosecutor Joan
Kagezi and police spokesman Andrew Felix Kaweesi.
The
new security arrangements — so far with no cost estimates — were ordered
late last month but only emerged on Thursday, drawing immediate
criticism.
"The directive is going to cost the country
an arm and a leg for the security of a few privileged individuals," said
Julius Mukunda, the executive director of Uganda's Civil Society Budget
Advocacy Group (CSBAG).
Mukunda speculated that costs
could run into the tens of millions of dollars if all 456 MPs were to be
granted the extra security arrangements and described the directive as
an "abuse of (the) budget process".
Parliament spokesman Chris Obore said, "It's not for every MP,
but those who face threats," without elaborating on who, or how many,
they were.
Shadow defence minister Muwanga Kivumbi said Museveni's order was proof that "he has failed on security".
The new spending comes as the government was forced to review a new social media tax in the wake of street protests.
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