Africa Map

African Press Agency

African Press Agency Logo
   

 Home
 Country Profile
 Useful Links
 Contact us

Home

Rwanda/UgandaBack
[Published: Saturday March 02 2019]

 Uganda, Rwanda feud restricts free movement

 
KIGALI/KAMPALA, 02 March. - (ANA) - On Thursday, an excited groom accompanied by his relatives boarded a bus from Kigali heading to Uganda for his wedding ceremony.
 
Two hours later, the Modern Coast bus arrived at Gatuna, known as Katuna on the Ugandan side, at 10am.
 
The passengers alighted to present their identity cards or passports for clearance by the immigration officials.
 
Four hours later, they were still pleading with the border officers to let them through.
 
Some minutes after 2pm, the bus was allowed to embark on its journey to Uganda. But, the 45-seater vehicle had another driver and only five passengers on board, none of whom was Rwandan.
 
The groom and his relatives, now downcast, watched as the bus was let through the border crossing.
 
The man who had been behind the wheel from Kigali had been forced to relinquish his seat to his co-driver, a Kenyan.
 
The disappointed travellers along with many others stranded at the border had to find their way back to Kigali.
 
Both Rwanda and Uganda had denied that cross border movement had been suspended since reports of restrained travel began to surface on Wednesday.
 
But Kampala has now admitted that there is a "slight problem" at all three border posts with Rwanda.
 
Government spokesman Ofwono Opondo told journalists on Thursday that the Foreign Affairs minister Mr Sam Kutesa is engaging Rwandan authorities to try resolve the border issues.
 
Mr Opondo accused Rwanda of refusing to allow both private and public vehicles from entering Uganda since Wednesday evening.
 
"They even prevented their own people from coming to buy daily necessities," he said, adding that even school children were blocked from crossing into Uganda for studies. 
 
On Thursday, Rwanda Revenue Authority issued a statement saying it was restricting cargo trucks from Uganda from entering the country at Gatuna/Katuna to allow for the completion of infrastructure upgrade at the one-stop border post.
 
RRA advised motorists to use Kagitumba/Mirama Hills border post instead.
 
But, by the time the announcement was made, citizens of the two countries had been complaining of being stranded at the border post.
 
“If there's any other reason beyond the construction works they have given, Mr Sam Kutesa is in engagement and we hope that this matter will be resolved quickly,” Mr Opondo said.
 
The cross-border row is the latest dispute in the longstanding feud between the two neighbours, who accuse each other of espionage.
 
For ordinary citizens, the deteriorating relations that have largely remained at the top, now seems to have moved to the grassroots, interrupting their lives.
 
Kigali accuses Kampala of harassing its nationals through arrests and torture and has been advising Rwandans to restrict their travel to Uganda. Kampala denies the claim saying those detained are individuals suspected of spying.
 
Most bus companies plying the Uganda-Rwanda route have now suspended travel.
 
“If you have a Rwandan passport, we cannot take you to Uganda. People are not allowed to cross. I don’t know when this will end but that is how it is. But if you have a Ugandan passport, you can be transported from Rwanda to Uganda,” an official at Volcano Bus Services told The EastAfrican.
 
Modern Coast issued a statement to its passengers saying that since the Gatuna border has been closed temporarily, "this will affect travel into and out of Rwanda. We will update you on further developments.”
 
At its Nairobi office, a Modern Coast official told The EastAfrican that they were not taking parcels destined for Rwanda.
 
When The EastAfrican visited the Gatuna border on Friday, foreigners were being allowed to cross to and from Rwanda.
 
Rwandan Immigration officials told citizens the restriction in place was due to security concerns.
 
"Just be patient. It's for your security that you won't be allowed to go to Uganda," an immigration official responded to pleas from Rwandans.
 
"Do you want to cross to Uganda and be mistreated? They will arrest and torture you. We will not allow you and other citizens to take that risk," the official told them.
 
For those allowed across the border, the travel costs have tripled as taxi drivers take advantage of the unavailability of buses.
 
Construction of the Gatuna/Katuna OSBP, the main gateway between Rwanda and Uganda, began in 2014 but faced funding challenges after World Bank pulled out.
 
The works at the border resumed earlier this month, funded by the respective governments.  - (ANA) -
 
AB/ANA/02 March 2019 - - -
 
 
 

North South News website

Advertise banner

News icon Israel/Gaza Destruction
News icon France/New Caledonia
News icon Spain/Palestine
News icon Israel/Cabinet Rift
News icon India/Opposition
News icon IMF/Cyber Threats
News icon ICJ/Gaza/Ruling
News icon Israel/Prisoners Humiliation
News icon Germany/Football
News icon UK/Rich Musicians

AFRICAN PRESS AGENCY Copyright © 2005 - 2007