Courts got brushed off as police stayed put at an opposition home, lawyers went scorched earth, and a simmering standoff spilled into rights claims, politics, and global side-eye.
Accusation against the police presence
Accusation against the police presence
- Uganda Law Society accused the Uganda Police Force of ignoring a court ruling.
- Demanded officers clear out of the Magere property.
- Framed the move as illegal restraint.
- Warned of contempt fallout.
- Robert Kyagulanyi won a liberty case against the state.
- Judges trashed open-ended home confinement.
- Found constitutional violations tied to the movement.
- Said confinement crossed legal limits.
- Uganda Law Society said access to necessities got blocked.
- Described conditions as degrading.
- Pointed to liberty and movement rights.
- Raised living standard concerns.
- Asiimwe Anthony signed for the Uganda Law Society.
- Addressed the note to Abbas Byakagaba.
- Copied the Attorney General.
- Included the Internal Affairs Minister.
- Robert Kyagulanyi reported repeated security operations at Magere.
- Alleged violent conduct by forces.
- He said Barbie Kyagulanyi ended up hospitalized.
- Authorities stayed publicly silent.
- The European Union criticized the election-period violence.
- Urged safety for political actors.
- Diplomats tracked events closely.
- Rights groups kept watch.
- Uganda Police Force offered no public reply.
- Gave no signal on pulling back.
- Left compliance unclear.
- Standoff remains unresolved.