Uganda: Bobi Wine claims victory, rejects poll results

0
452

Ugandan opposition leader Bobi Wine on Friday claimed victory in presidential elections, rejecting as a “complete sham” early results that gave President Yoweri Museveni a wide lead.

Wine said that he felt under threat as soldiers surrounded his home on Friday evening following his accusations of fraud to the press.

Museveni, 76, is seeking a sixth term after almost four decades in power, and the former popstar Wine has emerged as his main rival in a youthful country where most have known only one president.

READ: #UgandaDecides2021: Museveni in early lead as Bobi Wine alleges fraud

The internet remained down for a third day as vote counting continued from Thursday’s poll, with provisional results from 64 percent of polling stations giving Museveni a lead of 62 percent while Wine trailed with 30 percent.

As the results came in, Wine said in an interview at his home that soldiers had jumped the perimeter fence of his compound and beaten his security guard before taking up position around his house.

“They jumped over my fence. They came inside my compound. They are here right now. I don’t know why they’re here. But I’m imagining they are here to harm me. I feel threatened,” said the 38-year-old, who described the invasion as unprecedented and “a siege”.

He said he confronted the soldiers, who briefly cocked a gun at him and journalists, and refused to respond or leave.

The army’s deputy spokesman Deo Akiiki said the soldiers were there to provide security and had stopped three people who tried to “access the house”.

Provisional results showed Wine’s newly formed National Unity Party was on track to become the main opposition in parliament.

Earlier Wine had reeled of a list of election regularities during a press conference in his garden, such as ballot box stuffing, and his party’s polling agents being beaten and chased away in parts of northern and western Uganda.

“I am very confident that we defeated the dictator by far. I call upon all Ugandans to reject the blackmail. We have certainly won the election and we’ve won it by far,” Wine told journalists.

“Whatever is being declared is a complete sham, we reject it and we dissociate ourselves with it.”

Wine, whose real name is Robert Kyagulanyi, promised to provide video evidence once the internet was restored.

Election commission chairman Justice Simon Mugenyi Byabakama said he did “not appreciate the assertion that these results we are reading out are rigged”.

“The onus is on candidate Kyagulanyi to show how votes are rigged.”

Full results are expected by Saturday afternoon.

Museveni faced a total of 10 candidates, but it is the popularity of the former popstar Wine, who grew up in a slum and is nicknamed the “ghetto president”, that has rattled the former rebel leader.

The poll followed one of the most violent campaigns in years, with harassment and arrests of the opposition, attacks on the media and scores of deaths.