A Ugandan court on Wednesday released on bail a prominent human rights activist whose detention was seen by campaign groups as part of a widespread crackdown on dissent ahead of the country’s general election, held on Jan. 15.
Sarah Bireete, who heads the Centre for Constitutional Governance, a Kampala-based pressure group, was detained on Dec. 30 after questioning the accuracy of the voter register to be used in the poll.
She was later charged with offences related to the alleged unlawful disclosure of voters’ information.
On Wednesday, Magistrate Winnie Nankya Jatiko released her on bail, stating, “The applicant satisfied all the relevant requirements for the grant of bail.”
The official results of the poll showed long-ruling incumbent Yoweri Museveni securing 71.6 per cent of the votes.
Opposition leader Bobi Wine, who is in hiding and is being sought by the military, has rejected the results.
After Bireete’s detention, CCG said she was being persecuted for helping to “amplify the voices of the oppressed and marginalised”.
International rights groups Amnesty International and Human Rights Watch have been demanding her unconditional release.
The 81-year-old Museveni, already Africa’s third-longest-ruling head of state, will have been president of the East African country for 45 years by the time his term ends in 2031.
Rights groups and the opposition have long accused his government of using the military to suppress dissent.
The government denies those accusations. (Reuters/NAN)

