Source: http://www.monitor.co.ug/OpEd/OpEdColumnists/AugustineRuzindana/Remembering-the-aborted-1972-invasion-by-Ugandan-exiles/-/887296/2457196/-/item/1/-/xtex6rz/-/index.html
By Augustine RuzindanaPosted Friday, September 19 2014
In Summary
We landed safely in Minziro on the Tanzanian side
from where we proceeded to the Fronasa training camp near Bukoba Town,
arriving on September 15.
As I write, it is September 17, 2014, which reminds me of the same day 42 years ago, when Ugandan exiles invaded from Tanzania.
A few days before the invasion, I traveled from
Kampala with two Makerere students through Masaka, Kalisizo, Kyotera,
branching off to Katera where we found a military check-point at a
narrow breach of the escarpment just before sloping down to the Lake
Victoria shore where we boarded a canoe.
While on the lake and before we crossed the
Kagera River, which visibly crosses the lake with a strong current, the
boat’s engine ceased to function but luckily, we were skillfully rowed
across the river and the lake.
We landed safely in Minziro on the Tanzanian side
from where we proceeded to the Fronasa training camp near Bukoba Town,
arriving on September 15.
Mr Yoweri Museveni, our commander, (now President), informed me about the impeding invasion and that we were going along with the Obote forces and take advantage to move our materiel (arms and ammunition) into the country.
Mr Yoweri Museveni, our commander, (now President), informed me about the impeding invasion and that we were going along with the Obote forces and take advantage to move our materiel (arms and ammunition) into the country.
On September 17, we (a Fronasa platoon) set off
very early with the Obote forces for Uganda. Our force was in one lorry
and we had a Land Rover full of arms and ammunition.
Our platoon was divided into two sections; one
section commanded by Mwesigwa Black with Bagira as his second-in-command
and the other section commanded by Museveni, also our over-all
commander, with me as his second-in-command.
The Obote forces on the Mbarara axis were about 300, commanded by Captain Oyile and the over-all commander of the axis.
We branched off after Kyaka bridge and headed
towards Isingiro and Mbarara, by-passing a Tanzanian sugar plantation
and a government ranch. We were supposed to have surprised the Amin
forces in Mbarara but the convoy was slow and at day-break, more time
was wasted attacking a tse-tse fly camp at the border that was
eventually set on fire.
Some months before that invasion, Museveni and I
had passed by that road transporting our material on new bicycles which
were so hastily assembled that when we peddled, the peddles fell off and
we ended up pushing the bicycles up to our rendezvous with Zubairi
Bakari at Nshungyenzi.
We slowly proceeded towards Mbarara uneventfully
until we were passed by a speeding Peugeot driven by Ali Fadhul, the
then commanding officer of the battalion based at Mbarara.
A few miles later in Masha around where, in 1899,
Henry Stanley (Kakira Mukyenkye) met Bucunku, the Omugabe’s envoy, now
marked by a conical monument, we met a lorry full of soldiers, probably
following their commanding officer. As we fired at them, some of our
comrades ran away, including the driver of our lorry.
After this brief encounter, we set off driven by
Museveni and on reaching the junction at Nyamitanga, he could not turn
the lorry towards Mbarara so another driver turned it and we proceeded
on our mission. Just after we had passed Agip Motel, we met and fired
at a Land Rover full of Amin’s soldiers and only one soldier escaped and
ran towards Kijungu suburb.
At the forest before the barracks, we were fired
at by 106 guns and a shrapnel piece passed over my neck. It is here that
most of us dispersed before reaching the barracks.
After some time, I walked with an Obote soldier
for more than 10 kilometres to a village beyond Biharwe where I stayed
for three days and took a taxi to Kampala and then to Dar es Salaam.
Museveni drove back to Tanzania but some of our
comrades who went to relatives’ or friends’ homes in Mbarara Town were
later picked up and killed.
Mr Ruzindana is a former IGG and former MP. a_ruzindana@yahoo.com
Mr Ruzindana is a former IGG and former MP. a_ruzindana@yahoo.com
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