Arrests at NEMA flipped a peaceful wetland petition into a month behind bars, and the backlash has spiraled into threats, beatings, and livelihoods wrecked.
Arrests over Lwera Wetland protest
Arrests over Lwera Wetland protest
- Eight activists walked into the National Environment Management Authority with a petition.
- Police grabbed the group and slapped them with public nuisance charges.
- The court remanded them to prison for a month before bail came through.
- Since the release, several say they face threats and physical attacks.
- Zaina said strangers beat her and snatched her phone.
- Unknown callers allegedly pressured campaigners to ditch the Lwera fight.
- Fear has gripped participants who say they live on edge.
- Activists claim harassment kicked off after their time in custody.
- Fiona Nalusiba linked sand mining and rice farming to worse floods.
- Villages reportedly see gardens submerged during heavy rains.
- Chemical spraying in rice fields allegedly contaminates shared water.
- Residents described stomach illness after spraying days.
- Nalusiba accused the Uganda Wildlife Authority of ignoring warning signs.
- Dead birds were allegedly found after drinking from polluted water.
- Activists say official inaction signals indifference.
- Wetland damage allegedly continues without intervention.
- Nasser Jafali said prison time cost him his factory job.
- Managers at a Chinese-run plant allegedly terminated his position.
- Flooding destroyed his mother’s clinic in Kamuwunga.
- Jafali argued activists are punished while degraders profit.
- Joachim Mumbere leads Weka Afri Sustainable Biodiversity and Food Security Foundation.
- Anonymous callers allegedly dangled bribes to drop the campaign.
- Mumbere claimed illegal sand mining licenses are circulating.
- Corruption accusations stretch from village leaders upward.
- Kamuwunga village chairperson declined to discuss the wetland publicly.
- Jafali said joint petition efforts with leaders have stalled.
- Mumbere blamed bribery for the lack of cooperation.
- Residents recalled President Yoweri Museveni promising to cancel wetland land titles.