On
this date, August 16, 2003, the Ugandan Dictator A.K.A Hitler in Africa, Idi
Amin Dada, died of multiple organ failure. I will post information about this Dictator from Wikipedia and other links.
Idi Amin Dada: Hitler in Africa
by Thomas Patrick
Melady
[PHOTO SOURCE: http://www.amazon.com/Idi-Amin-Dada-Hitler-Africa/dp/0836207831]
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Idi Amin [PHOTO
SOURCE: http://www.biography.com/people/idi-amin-9183487#synopsis]
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Idi Amin addressing the United Nations
General Assembly in New York in 1975
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3rd
President of Uganda
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In
office
25 January 1971 – 11 April 1979 |
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Vice President
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Mustafa Adrisi
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Preceded by
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Milton Obote
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Succeeded by
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Yusufu Lule
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Personal
details
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Born
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Idi Amin Dada
c. 1925 Koboko, Uganda Protectorate |
Died
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16 August 2003 (aged 78 years)
Jeddah, Saudi Arabia |
Nationality
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Ugandan
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Spouse(s)
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Malyamu (divorced)
Kay (divorced) Nora (divorced) Madina (widow) Sarah Kyolaba (widow) |
Children
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Hafsa Araba
Emira Hawa Wangita Faisal Wangita Khadija Abiriya |
Religion
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Islam
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Military
service
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Allegiance
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United Kingdom
Uganda |
Service/branch
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Years of service
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1946–1962 (UK)
1962–1979 (Uganda) |
Rank
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Lieutenant (UK)
Field Marshal |
Unit
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Commands
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Battles/wars
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Chronology
of Amin's military promotions
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King's
African Rifles
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1946
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Joins King's African Rifles
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1947
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Private
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1952
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Corporal
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1953
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Sergeant
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1958
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Sergeant major (acting as platoon commander)
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1959
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Effendi (warrant officer)
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1961
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Lieutenant (one of the first two Ugandan officers)
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Uganda
Army
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1962
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Captain
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1963
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Major
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1964
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Deputy Commander of the Army
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1965
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Colonel, Commander of the Army
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1968
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Major general
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1971
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Head of state
Chairman of the Defence Council Commander-in-chief of the armed forces Army Chief of Staff and Chief of Air Staff |
1975
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Field Marshal
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Idi Amin Dada
(/ˈiːdi ɑːˈmiːn/; c. 1925 – 16 August 2003) was the
third President of Uganda, ruling from 1971 to 1979. Amin joined the British
colonial regiment, the King's African Rifles in 1946, serving in Kenya and
Uganda. Eventually, Amin held the rank of major general in the post-colonial
Ugandan Army and became its commander before seizing power in the military coup
of January 1971, deposing Milton Obote. He later promoted himself to field
marshal while he was the head of state.
Amin's
rule was characterized by human rights abuses, political repression, ethnic
persecution, extrajudicial killings, nepotism, corruption, and gross economic
mismanagement. The number of people killed as a result of his regime is
estimated by international observers and human rights groups to range from
100,000 to 500,000.
During
his years in power, Amin shifted in allegiance from being a pro-Western ruler
enjoying considerable Israeli support to being backed by Libya's Muammar
Gaddafi, the Soviet Union, and East Germany. In 1975, Amin became the chairman
of the Organisation of African Unity (OAU), a Pan-Africanist group designed to
promote solidarity of the African states. During the 1977–1979 period, Uganda
was a member of the United Nations Commission on Human Rights. In 1977, when
Britain broke diplomatic relations with Uganda, Amin declared he had defeated
the British and added "CBE", for "Conqueror of the British
Empire", to his title. Radio Uganda then announced his entire title:
"his Excellency President for Life, Field Marshal Alhaji Dr. Idi Amin
Dada, VC, DSO, MC, CBE".
Dissent
within Uganda and Amin's attempt to annex the Kagera province of Tanzania in
1978 led to the Uganda–Tanzania War and the demise of his eight-year regime,
leading Amin to flee into exile to Libya and Saudi Arabia, where he lived until
his death on 16 August 2003.
1 Biography
1.1 Early life
Amin
never wrote an autobiography nor did he authorize any official written account
of his life, so there are discrepancies regarding when and where he was born.
Most biographical sources hold that he was born in either Koboko or Kampala
around 1925. Other unconfirmed sources state Amin's year of birth from as early
as 1923 to as late as 1928. According to Fred Guweddeko, a researcher at Makerere
University, Idi Amin was the son of Andreas Nyabire (1889–1976). Nyabire, a
member of the Kakwa ethnic group, converted from Roman Catholicism to Islam in
1910 and changed his name to Amin Dada. He named his first-born son after
himself. Abandoned by his father at a young age, Idi Amin grew up with his
mother's family in a rural farming town in northwestern Uganda. Guweddeko
states that Amin's mother was called Assa Aatte (1904–1970), an ethnic Lugbara
and a traditional herbalist who treated members of Buganda royalty, among
others. Amin joined an Islamic school in Bombo in 1941. After a few years, he
left school with nothing more than a fourth grade English-language education
and did odd jobs before being recruited to the army by a British colonial army
officer.
1.2 Colonial British Army
Amin
joined the King's African Rifles (KAR) of the British Colonial Army in 1946 as
an assistant cook. He claimed he was forced to join the Army during World War
II and that he served in the Burma Campaign, but records indicate he was first
enlisted after the war was concluded.
He was transferred to Kenya for infantry service as a private in 1947 and
served in the 21st KAR infantry battalion in Gilgil, Kenya until 1949. That
year, his unit was deployed to Northern Kenya to fight against Somali rebels in
the Shifta War. In 1952 his brigade was deployed against the Mau Mau rebels in
Kenya. He was promoted to corporal the same year, then to sergeant in 1953.
In
1959, Amin was made Afande (warrant officer), the highest rank possible
for a Black African in the colonial British Army of that time. Amin returned to
Uganda the same year, and in 1961 he was promoted to lieutenant, becoming one
of the first two Ugandans to become commissioned officers. He was assigned to
quell the cattle rustling between Uganda's Karamojong and Kenya's Turkana nomads.
In 1962, following Uganda's independence from the United Kingdom, Amin was
promoted to captain and then, in 1963, to major. He was appointed Deputy
Commander of the Army the following year.
Amin
was an athlete during his time in both the British and Ugandan army. At
193 cm (6 ft 4 in) tall and powerfully built, he was the Ugandan
light heavyweight boxing champion from 1951 to 1960, as well as a swimmer. Idi
Amin was also a formidable rugby forward, although one officer said of him:
"Idi Amin is a splendid type and a good (rugby) player, but virtually bone
from the neck up, and needs things explained in words of one letter". In
the 1950s, he played for Nile RFC. There is a frequently repeated urban myth
that he was selected as a replacement by East Africa for their match against
the 1955 British Lions. Amin, however, does not appear on the team photograph
or on the official team list, and replacements were not allowed in
international rugby until 13 years after this event is supposed to have taken
place.
Following
conversations with a colleague in the British Army, Amin became a keen fan of Hayes
Football Club – an affection that would remain for the rest of his life.
1.3 Army commander
In
1965, Prime Minister Milton Obote and Amin were implicated in a deal to smuggle
ivory and gold into Uganda from Zaire. The deal, as later alleged by General
Nicholas Olenga, an associate of the former Congolese leader Patrice Lumumba,
was part of an arrangement to help troops opposed to the Congolese government
trade ivory and gold for arms supplies secretly smuggled to them by Amin. In
1966, the Ugandan Parliament demanded an investigation. Obote imposed a new
constitution abolishing the ceremonial presidency held by Kabaka (King) Mutesa
II of Buganda, and declared himself executive president. He promoted Amin to
colonel and army commander. Amin led an attack on the Kabaka's palace and
forced Mutesa into exile to the United Kingdom, where he remained until his
death in 1969.
Amin
began recruiting members of Kakwa, Lugbara, South Sudanese, and other ethnic
groups from the West Nile area bordering South Sudan. The South Sudanese had
been residents in Uganda since the early 20th century, having come from South
Sudan to serve the colonial army. Many African ethnic groups in northern Uganda
inhabit both Uganda and South Sudan; allegations persist that Amin's army consisted
mainly of South Sudanese soldiers
1.4 Seizure of power
Eventually,
a rift developed between Amin and Obote, exacerbated by the support Amin had
built within the army by recruiting from the West Nile region, his involvement
in operations to support the rebellion in southern Sudan, and an attempt on
Obote's life in 1969. In October 1970, Obote himself took control of the armed
forces, reducing Amin from his months-old post of commander of all the armed forces
to that of commander of the army.
Having
learned that Obote was planning to arrest him for misappropriating army funds,
Amin seized power in a military coup on 25 January 1971, while Obote was
attending a Commonwealth summit meeting in Singapore. Troops loyal to Amin
sealed off Entebbe International Airport, the main airport, and took Kampala.
Soldiers surrounded Obote's residence and blocked major roads. A broadcast on Radio
Uganda accused Obote's government of corruption and preferential treatment of
the Lango region. Cheering crowds were reported in the streets of Kampala after
the radio broadcast. Amin announced that he was a soldier, not a politician,
and that the military government would remain only as a caretaker regime until
new elections, which would be announced when the situation was normalised. He
promised to release all political prisoners.
Amin
gave former king of Buganda and President, Sir Edward Mutesa (who had died in
exile), a state funeral in April 1971, freed many political prisoners, and
reiterated his promise to hold free and fair elections to return the country to
democratic rule in the shortest period possible.
1.5
Presidency
Main
article: History of Uganda (1971–79)
1.5.1
Establishment of military rule
On
2 February 1971, one week after the coup, Amin declared himself President of
Uganda, Commander-in-Chief of the Armed Forces, Army Chief of Staff, and Chief
of Air Staff. He announced that he was suspending certain provisions of the Ugandan
constitution and soon instituted an Advisory Defence Council composed of
military officers with himself as the chairman. Amin placed military tribunals
above the system of civil law, appointed soldiers to top government posts and parastatal
agencies, and informed the newly inducted civilian cabinet ministers that they
would be subject to military discipline. Amin renamed the presidential lodge in
Kampala from Government House to "The Command Post". He disbanded the
General Service Unit (GSU), an intelligence agency created by the previous
government, and replaced it with the State Research Bureau (SRB). SRB
headquarters at the Kampala suburb of Nakasero became the scene of torture and
executions over the next few years. Other agencies used to persecute dissenters
included the military police and the Public Safety Unit (PSU).
Obote
took refuge in Tanzania, having been offered sanctuary there by the Tanzanian
President Julius Nyerere. Obote was soon joined by 20,000 Ugandan refugees
fleeing Amin. The exiles attempted, and failed, to regain the country in 1972
through a poorly organised coup attempt.
1.5.2
Persecution of ethnic and other groups
Amin
retaliated against the attempted invasion by Ugandan exiles in 1972 by purging
the army of Obote supporters, predominantly those from the Acholi
and Lango
ethnic groups. In July 1971, Lango and Acholi soldiers were massacred in the Jinja
and Mbarara Barracks, and
by early 1972, some 5,000 Acholi and Lango soldiers, and at least twice as many
civilians, had disappeared. The victims soon came to include members of other ethnic
groups, religious leaders, journalists, artists, senior bureaucrats, judges,
lawyers, students and intellectuals, criminal suspects, and foreign nationals.
In this atmosphere of violence, many other people were killed for criminal
motives or simply at will. Bodies were often dumped into the River Nile.
The
killings, motivated by ethnic, political, and financial factors, continued
throughout Amin's eight-year reign. The exact number of people killed is
unknown. The International Commission of Jurists estimated the death toll at no
fewer than 80,000 and more likely around 300,000. An estimate compiled by exile
organizations with the help of Amnesty International puts the number killed at
500,000. Among the most prominent people killed were Benedicto Kiwanuka, the
former Prime Minister and Chief Justice; Janani Luwum, the Anglican archbishop;
Joseph Mubiru, the former governor of the Central Bank; Frank Kalimuzo, the
vice chancellor of Makerere University; Byron Kawadwa, a prominent playwright;
and two of Amin's own cabinet ministers, Erinayo Wilson Oryema and Charles
Oboth Ofumbi.
Amin
recruited his followers from his own tribe, the Kakwas, along with South
Sudanese. By 1977, these 3 groups formed 60% of the 22 top generals and 75% of
the cabinet. Similarly, Muslims formed 80% and 87.5% of these groups even
though they were only 5% of the population. This helps explain why Amin
survived 8 attempted coups. The army grew from 10,000 to 25,000 by 1978. Amin's
army was largely a mercenary force. Half the soldiers were South Sudanese, 26%
Congolese, only 24% were Ugandan, mostly Muslim and Kakwa.
In
August 1972, Amin declared what he called an "economic war", a set of
policies that included the expropriation of properties owned by Asians and
Europeans. Uganda's 80,000 Asians were mostly from the Indian subcontinent and
born in the country, their ancestors having come to Uganda when the country was
still a British colony. Many owned businesses, including large-scale
enterprises, which formed the backbone of the Ugandan economy. On 4 August
1972, Amin issued a decree ordering the expulsion of the 60,000 Asians who were
not Ugandan citizens (most of them held British
passports). This was later amended to include all 80,000 Asians, except for
professionals, such as doctors, lawyers, and teachers. A plurality of the
Asians with British passports, around 30,000, emigrated to the UK. Others went
to Australia, Canada, India, Kenya, Pakistan, Sweden, Tanzania, and the U.S.
Amin expropriated businesses and properties belonging to the Asians and handed
them over to his supporters. The businesses were mismanaged, and industries
collapsed from lack of maintenance. This proved disastrous for the already
declining economy.
In
1977, Henry Kyemba, Amin's health minister and a former official of the first
Obote regime, defected and resettled in the UK. Kyemba wrote and published A
State of Blood, the first insider exposé of Amin's rule.
Idi Amin visits Mobutu during the Shaba I
conflict. (April 1977)
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1.5.3
International relations
See
also: Foreign relations of Uganda
Following
the expulsion of Ugandan Asians in 1972, most of whom were of Indian descent,
India severed diplomatic relations with Uganda. The same year, as part of his
"economic war", Amin broke diplomatic ties with the UK and nationalised
eighty-five British-owned businesses.
That
year, relations with Israel soured. Although Israel had previously supplied
Uganda with arms, in 1972 Amin expelled Israeli military advisers and turned to
Muammar
Gaddafi of Libya and the Soviet Union for support. Amin became an outspoken
critic of Israel. In return,
Gaddafi gave financial aid to Amin. In the 1974 French-produced documentary
film General Idi Amin Dada: A Self Portrait, Amin discussed his plans
for war against Israel, using paratroops, bombers and suicide squadrons.
The
Soviet Union became Amin's largest arms supplier. East Germany was involved in
the General Service Unit and the State Research Bureau, the two agencies which
were most notorious for terror. Later during the Ugandan invasion of Tanzania
in 1979, East Germany attempted to remove evidence of its involvement with
these agencies.
In
1973, U.S. Ambassador Thomas Patrick Melady recommended that the
United States reduce its presence in Uganda. Melady described Amin's regime as
"racist, erratic and unpredictable, brutal, inept, bellicose, irrational,
ridiculous, and militaristic". Accordingly, the United States closed its
embassy in Kampala.
In
June 1976, Amin allowed an Air France airliner from Tel Aviv to Paris hijacked
by two members of the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine – External
Operations (PFLP-EO) and two members of the German Revolutionäre Zellen to land
at Entebbe Airport. There the hijackers were joined by three more. Soon after,
156 non-Jewish hostages who did not hold Israeli passports were released and
flown to safety, while 83 Jews and Israeli citizens, as well as 20 others who
refused to abandon them (among whom were the captain and crew of the hijacked Air
France jet), continued to be held hostage. In the subsequent Israeli rescue
operation, codenamed Operation Thunderbolt (popularly known as Operation
Entebbe), on the night of 3–4 July 1976, a group of Israeli commandos were
flown in from Israel and seized control of Entebbe Airport, freeing nearly all
the hostages. Three hostages died during the operation and 10 were wounded;
seven hijackers, about 45 Ugandan soldiers, and one Israeli soldier, Yoni
Netanyahu, were killed. A fourth hostage, 75-year-old Dora Bloch, an elderly
Jewish Englishwoman who had been taken to Mulago Hospital in Kampala before the
rescue operation, was subsequently murdered in reprisal. The incident further
soured Uganda's international relations, leading the United Kingdom to close
its High Commission in Uganda.
Uganda
under Amin embarked on a large military build-up, which raised concerns in Kenya.
Early in June 1975, Kenyan officials impounded a large convoy of Soviet-made
arms en route to Uganda at the port of Mombasa. Tension between Uganda
and Kenya reached its climax in February 1976 when Amin announced that he would
investigate the possibility that parts of southern Sudan and western and
central Kenya, up to within 32 kilometres (20 mi) of Nairobi, were
historically a part of colonial Uganda. The Kenyan Government responded with a
stern statement that Kenya would not part with "a single inch of
territory". Amin backed down after the Kenyan army deployed troops and armored
personnel carriers along the Kenya–Uganda border.
1.6
Deposition and exile
See
also: Uganda–Tanzania War
By
1978, the number of Amin's supporters and close associates had shrunk
significantly, and he faced increasing dissent from the populace within Uganda
as the economy and infrastructure collapsed from years of neglect and abuse.
After the killings of Bishop Luwum and ministers Oryema and Oboth Ofumbi in
1977, several of Amin's ministers defected or fled into exile. In November
1978, after Amin's vice president, General Mustafa Adrisi, was injured in a car
accident, troops loyal to him mutinied. Amin sent troops against the mutineers,
some of whom had fled across the Tanzanian border. Amin accused Tanzanian President Julius
Nyerere of waging war against Uganda, ordered the invasion of Tanzanian
territory, and formally annexed a section of the Kagera Region across the
boundary.
In
January 1979, Nyerere mobilised the Tanzania People's Defence Force and
counterattacked, joined by several groups of Ugandan exiles who had united as
the Uganda National Liberation Army (UNLA). Amin's army retreated steadily,
and, despite military help from Libya's Muammar Gaddafi, he was forced to flee
into exile by helicopter on 11 April 1979, when Kampala
was captured. He escaped first to Libya, where he stayed until 1980, and
ultimately settled in Saudi Arabia, where the Saudi royal family allowed him
sanctuary and paid him a generous subsidy in return for his staying out of
politics. Amin lived for a number of years on the top two floors of the Novotel
Hotel on Palestine Road in Jeddah. Brian Barron, who covered the Uganda–Tanzania
war for the BBC as chief Africa correspondent, together with cameraman Mohamed
Amin of Visnews in Nairobi, located Amin in 1980 and secured the first
interview with him since his deposition.
During
interviews he gave during his exile in Saudi Arabia, Amin held that Uganda
needed him and never expressed remorse for the nature of his regime. In 1989,
he attempted to return to Uganda, apparently to lead an armed group organised
by Colonel Juma Oris. He reached Kinshasa, Zaire (now the Democratic Republic
of the Congo), before Zairian President Mobutu Sese Seko forced him to return
to Saudi Arabia.
1.7
Death
On
19 July 2003, one of Amin's wives, Madina, reported that he was in a coma and
near death at the King Faisal Specialist Hospital and Research Centre in Jeddah,
Saudi Arabia, from kidney failure. She pleaded with the Ugandan President, Yoweri
Museveni, to allow him to return to Uganda for the remainder of his life.
Museveni replied that Amin would have to "answer for his sins the moment
he was brought back". Amin's family decided to disconnect life support and
Amin died at the hospital in Jeddah on 16 August 2003 and was buried in Ruwais
Cemetery in Jeddah in a simple grave without any fanfare.
Remnants of Amin's palace on Lake Victoria.
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2
Family and associates
A
polygamist, Idi Amin married at least five women, three of whom he divorced. He
married his first and second wives, Malyamu and Kay, in 1966. The next year, he
married Nora and then married Nalongo Madina in 1972. On 26 March 1974, he
announced on Radio Uganda that he had divorced Malyamu, Nora and Kay. Malyamu
was arrested in Tororo on the Kenyan border in April 1974 and accused of
attempting to smuggle a bolt of fabric into Kenya. She later moved to London
where she operates a restaurant in East London. Kay Amin died under mysterious
circumstances in the mid 70s and her body was found dismembered. Nora first
fled to DR Congo in 1979 but her current whereabouts are unknown.
In
August 1975, during the Organisation of African Unity (OAU) summit meeting in
Kampala, Amin married Sarah Kyolaba, who was famously known as Suicide Sarah.
Sarah's boyfriend, whom she had been living with before she met Amin, vanished
and was never heard from again. By 1993, Amin was living with the last nine of
his children and a single wife, Mama a Chumaru (who appears to be his sixth and
newest wife), the mother of the youngest four of his children. His last known
child, daughter Iman, was born in 1992. According to The Monitor, Amin
married a few months before his death in 2003.
Sources
differ widely on the number of children Amin fathered; most say that he had 30
to 45. Until 2003, Taban Amin (born 1955), Idi Amin's eldest son, was the
leader of West Nile Bank Front (WNBF), a rebel group opposed to the government
of Yoweri Museveni. In 2005, he was offered amnesty by Museveni, and in 2006,
he was appointed Deputy Director General of the Internal Security Organisation.
Another of Amin's sons, Haji Ali Amin, ran for election as Chairman (i.e.
mayor) of Njeru Town Council in 2002 but was not elected. In early 2007, the
award-winning film The Last King of Scotland prompted one of his sons,
Jaffar Amin (born in 1967), to speak out in his father's defence. Jaffar Amin
said he was writing a book to rehabilitate his father's reputation. Jaffar is
the tenth of Amin's 40 official children by seven official wives.
On
3 August 2007, Faisal Wangita (born in 1983), one of Amin's sons, was convicted
for playing a role in a murder in London. Wangita's mother is Amin's fifth
wife, Sarah Kyolaba (born 1955) a former go-go dancer, but known as 'Suicide
Sarah', because she was a go-go dancer for the Ugandan Army's Revolutionary
Suicide Mechanised Regiment Band.
Among
Amin's closest associates was the British-born Bob Astles, who is considered by
many to have been a malignant influence and by others as having been a
moderating presence. Isaac Malyamungu was an instrumental affiliate and one of
the more feared officers in Amin's army.
3
Erratic behaviour, self-bestowed titles, and media
portrayal
Amin's
egotistical behaviour and mental health have been the subjects of much
speculation throughout his reign and life. He was described as having a
quick-change and violent short temper; being charming, happy, and charismatic
one minute and then suddenly angry, violent, and brutal the next with little or
no warning. Many have speculated his behaviour was either the result of
long-term syphilis of the brain or possibly undiagnosed and untreated bipolar
disorder. As the years progressed, Amin's behaviour became more erratic,
unpredictable, and outspoken. After the United Kingdom broke off all diplomatic
relations with his regime in 1977, Amin declared he had defeated the British
and conferred on himself the decoration of CBE (Conqueror of the British
Empire). His full self-bestowed title ultimately became: "His Excellency,
President for Life, Field Marshal Al Hadji Doctor Idi Amin Dada, VC, DSO, MC,
Lord of All the Beasts of the Earth and Fishes of the Seas and Conqueror of the
British Empire in Africa in General and Uganda in Particular", in addition
to his officially-stated claim of being the uncrowned King of Scotland. He was
not a recipient of a Distinguished Service Order (DSO) or a Military Cross
(MC). He conferred a doctorate of law on himself from Makerere University as
well as the Victorious Cross (VC), a medal made to emulate the British Victoria
Cross.
Amin
became the subject of rumours and myths, including a widespread belief that he
was a cannibal. Some of the unsubstantiated rumours, such as the mutilation of
one of his wives, were spread and popularised by the 1980 film Rise and Fall
of Idi Amin and alluded to in the film The Last King of Scotland in
2006, a movie which earned actor Forest Whitaker a Best Actor Academy Award for
his portrayal of Amin.
During
Amin's time in power, popular media outside of Uganda often portrayed him as an
essentially comic and eccentric figure. In a 1977 assessment typical of the
time, a Time magazine article described him as a "killer and clown,
big-hearted buffoon and strutting martinet". The comedy-variety series Saturday
Night Live aired four Amin sketches between 1976–79, including one in which
he was an ill-behaved houseguest in exile, and another in which he was a
spokesman against venereal disease. The foreign media were often criticised by
Ugandan exiles and defectors for focusing on Amin's excessive tastes and
self-aggrandizing eccentricities, and downplaying or excusing his murderous
behavior. Other commentators even suggested that Amin had deliberately cultivated
his eccentric reputation in the foreign media as an easily parodied buffoon in
order to defuse international concern over his administration of Uganda.
Whitaker's uncanny performance in The Last King Of Scotland as the eccentric and brutal
Ugandan dictator Idi Amin scooped him an Oscar. Based on true events, the film
tells the story of a young Scottish doctor (played by James McAvoy), who
through a strange twist of fate, becomes the personal physician to Amin.
Whitaker's mesmerising and uncanny performance brought a human element to a man
history will most likely remember as a monster. [PHOTO
SOURCE: http://www.virginmedia.com/movies/features/best-impersonations.php?page=7]
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4
Portrayal in media and literature
4.1
Film dramatisations
- Victory at Entebbe (1976), a TV film about Operation Entebbe. Julius Harris plays Amin. Godfrey Cambridge was originally cast as Amin, but died of a heart attack on the set. Amin commented on Cambridge's death, saying that it was "punishment from God."[71]
- Raid on Entebbe (1977), a film depicting the events of Operation Entebbe. Yaphet Kotto portrays Amin as a charismatic, but short-tempered, political and military leader.
- In Mivtsa Yonatan (1977; also known as Operation Thunderbolt), an Israeli film about Operation Entebbe, Jamaican-born British actor Mark Heath portrays Amin, who in this film is first angered by the Palestinian terrorists whom he later comes to support.
- Rise and Fall of Idi Amin (1981), a film recreating Idi Amin's atrocities. Amin is played by Kenyan actor Joseph Olita.
- The Naked Gun: From the Files of Police Squad! (1988), a comedy film in which Amin, portrayed by Prince Hughes, is one of the real life figures in the Beirut meeting where he helps plan to attack the United States at the beginning of the movie. Frank Drebin hilariously ends up injuring Amin's hand after blocking a punch with a spitoon and uses it to knock Amin out a window.
- Mississippi Masala (1991), a film depicting the resettlement of an Indian family after the expulsion of Asians from Uganda by Idi Amin. Joseph Olita again plays Amin in a cameo.
- The Last King of Scotland (2006), a film adaptation of Giles Foden's 1998 novel of the same name. For his portrayal of Idi Amin, Forest Whitaker won the Academy Award, British Academy Film Award, Broadcast Film Critics Association Award, Golden Globe Award, and Screen Actors Guild Award, thus becoming the fourth black actor to win the Oscar for Best Actor.
4.2
Documentaries
- General Idi Amin Dada: A Self Portrait (1974), directed by French filmmaker Barbet Schroeder.
- Idi Amin: Monster in Disguise (1997), a television documentary directed by Greg Baker.
- The Man Who Ate His Archbishop's Liver? (2004), a television documentary written, produced and directed by Elizabeth C. Jones for Associated-Rediffusion and Channel 4.
- The Man Who Stole Uganda (1971), World In Action first broadcast 5 April 1971.
- Inside Idi Amin's Terror Machine (1979), World In Action first broadcast 13 June 1979.
4.3
Books
- State of Blood: The Inside Story of Idi Amin (1977) by Henry Kyemba
- The General Is Up by Peter Nazareth
- Ghosts of Kampala: The Rise and Fall of Idi Amin (1980) by George Ivan Smith
- The Last King of Scotland (1998) by Giles Foden (fictional)
- Idi Amin Dada: Hitler in Africa (1977) by Thomas Patrick Melady
- General Amin (1975) by David Martin
- I Love Idi Amin: The Story of Triumph under Fire in the Midst of Suffering and Persecution in Uganda (1977) by Festo Kivengere
- Impassioned for Freedom: Uganda, Struggle Against Idi Amin (2006) by Eriya Kategaya
- Confessions of Idi Amin: The chilling, explosive expose of Africa's most evil man – in his own words (1977) compiled by Trevor Donald
- "Kahawa" by Donald Westlake; a thriller in which Amin is a minor character, but Amin's Uganda is portrayed in detail.
- "Culture of the Sepulchre" (2012) by Madanjeet Singh (former Indian Ambassador to Uganda)
4.4
Music and audio
- "Idi Amin - the Amazin' Man song" (1975) by John Bird
- "Springtime in Uganda" (2004) by Blaze Foley (posthumous release)
- The Collected Bulletins of Idi Amin (1974) and Further Bulletins of President Idi Amin (1975) by Alan Coren, portraying Amin as an amiable, if murderous, buffoon in charge of a tin-pot dictatorship. Alan was also responsible in part for a music release – "The Collected Broadcasts of Idi Amin". It was a British comedy album parodying Ugandan dictator Idi Amin, released in 1975 on Transatlantic Records. It was performed by John Bird and written by Alan Coren, based on columns he wrote for Punch magazine.
5 Notes
- A ^ Many sources, like Encyclopædia Britannica, Encarta and the Columbia Encyclopedia, hold that Amin was born in Koboko or Kampala c. 1925, and that the exact date of his birth is unknown. Researcher Fred Guweddeko claimed that Amin was born on 17 May 1928, but that is disputed. The only certainty is that Amin was born some time during the mid-1920s.
- B ^ According to Henry Kyema and the African Studies Review, Idi Amin had 34 children. Some sources say Amin claimed to have fathered 32 children. A report in The Monitor says he was survived by 45 children, while another in the BBC gives the figure of 54.
Idi Amin’s Quote on Politics and Boxing
[PHOTO SOURCE: http://izquotes.com/quote/206881]
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INTERNET SOURCE: http://en.wikiquote.org/wiki/Idi_Amin
Idi Amin Dada
(May 17, 1925 – August 16, 2003) was a Ugandan military officer and the
President of Uganda from 1971 to 1979.
Sourced
- Sometimes people mistake the way I talk for what I am thinking. I never had any formal education—not even a nursery school certificate. But sometimes I know more than Ph.D.s because as a military man I know how to act. I am a man of action.
- Appears in Barbet Schroeder (1974), General Idi Amin Dada: A Self Portrait
- Politics is like boxing — you try to knock out your opponents.
- Interview, African summit talks, Angola, January 1976. Reported p.A8, Palm Beach Post, January 12, 1976
Attributed
- My mission is to lead the country out of a bad situation of corruption, depression and slavery. After I rid the country of these vices, I will then organize and supervise a general election of a genuinely democratic civilian government.
- Quoted in Uganda, the Human Rights Situation (1978), by United States Congress. Senate, p. 13 - Civil rights - 1978
- His Excellency, President for Life, Field Marshal Al Hadji Doctor Idi Amin Dada, VC, DSO, MC, Lord of All the Beasts of the Earth and Fishes of the Seas and Conqueror of the British Empire in Africa in General and Uganda in Particular.
- His full, formal title, which he conferred upon himself. Quoted inAfricana: The Encyclopedia of the African and African American Experience (1999) by Anthony Appiah and Henry Louis Gates
- You cannot run faster than a bullet.
- Quoted in The Mammoth Book of Zingers, Quips, and One-Liners (2004) by Geoff Tibballs, p. 51
- Although some people felt Adolf Hitler was bad, he was a great man and a real conqueror whose name would never be forgotten.
- Quoted in The Evil 100 (2004) by Martin Gilman Wolcott, p. 78
- In any country there must be people who have to die. They are the sacrifices any nation has to make to achieve law and order.
- Quoted in Morrow's International Dictionary of Contemporary Quotations, 1982, Jonathon Green.
- I am the hero of Africa.
- Quoted in Simpson's Contemporary Quotations, by James Beasley Simpson, p. 1
- Hitler and all German people knew that the Israelis are not people who are working in the interest of the people of the world and that is why they burnt over six million Jews alive on the soil of Germany. The world should remember that the palestinians, with the assitance of Germany made the operation possible in the Olympic village.
- Telegram sent to Kurt Waldheim in 1972 after the Munich massacre
Idi Amin Quote [PHOTO SOURCE: http://izquotes.com/quote/4442]
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About Idi Amin
- Amin is a splendid man by any standards and is held in great respect and affection by his British colleagues. … He is tough and fearless and in the judgment of everybody … completely reliable. Against this he is not very bright and will probably find difficulty in dealing with the administrative side of command.
- OG Griffith, 1969 despatch on Amin's promotion to major, released by Public Record Office. Amin hailed as splendid, but not very bright, June 23, 2000, Richard Norton Taylor, The Guardian.
- Idi Amin is a splendid type and a good [rugby] player … but virtually bone from the neck up, and needs things explained in words of one letter.
- Document from Public Record Office quoting "a British official"; cited variously in obituaries including Prayers but no forgiveness for Idi Amin, August 18, 2003, Anton La Guardia, Daily Telegraph.
- Racist, erratic and unpredictable, brutal, inept, bellicose, irrational, ridiculous, and militaristic.
- About Amin's regime. Telegram 1 From the Embassy in Uganda to the Department of State, January 2, 1973, 0700Z, U.S. Ambassador Thomas Patrick Melady. US Department of State.
- He is killer and clown, big-hearted buffoon and strutting martinet.
- Uganda. Amin: The Wild Man of Africa, March 07, 1977, Time magazine
- Field Marshall Idi Amin became president of Uganda in 1971. To the rest of the world he was a showman his extravegance was exceeded by his talent for comic buffonery. But behind the grinning face was a calculating monster who brought about a tragedy of monumental proportions. He slaughtered thousands of innocent Ugandans in a campaign of ethnic cleansing and executed his enemies live on television. He mutilated his wife and murdered his ministers keeping their heads in his fridge as a warning to others. He ordered his secret police to torture and kill while Amin kept the pictures for his own sick amusement. By the end of his reign over 300,000 people, one in 60 in the population, had been murdered by Amin. He had turned the prosperous country of Uganda into a disease ridden backwater it's river's choked with the corpses of his victims.
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- Introduction to a Discovery Channel documentary about Idi Amin
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