Senior Officers Arube
Senior Officers Arube
Senior Officers Arube
overthrow Amin
On March 23 and 24, 1974, Uganda‟s president Field Marshal Idi
Amin was nearly ousted. Known as the “Brig Arube Coup”, it was
the first military attempt to overthrow Amin since he became
president after his 1971 coup that toppled president Milton Obote.
The two chief plotters of the coup against Amin were Kakwa from
Koboko, in West Nile sub-region, just as Amin.
The two chief architects of the coup leaked the plot to other trusted
soldiers below their ranks, who in turn conveyed the message to
their juniors.
The soldiers were less than an hour away from capturing or killing
Amin and announcing Arube the new president of Uganda.
Genesis
Arube and Aseni had drafted the mission well. The word “sort out”
all non-Ugandan officers serving in the armed forces electrified
soldiers, especially of the low ranks as they too had lost someone by
extrajudicial killings of the regime.
Because Arube and Aseni had openly reprimanded Amin for the
presence of foreigners in the Uganda Army, enmity erupted between
senior foreign officers and those from Uganda.
Such animosity resulted into the shooting dead of all Aseni‟s family
members by Lt Col Malera.
In a vengeance stupor, Aseni looked for Malera for the whole day,
but did not find him.
“Malera had been looking for Aseni for some time. Aseni was always
above Malera and that is why he was not killed. Aseni was a very
intelligent soldier. He was a professional soldier and that‟s why he
did not kill Malera‟s wife. He did not want to do what Malera did to
his wife,” says Isaac Bakka, a retired Captain of the Uganda Army.
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army, State Research and police, as well as Amin, would get wind of
it and escape.
The forces under the command of Arube swiftly went into action
across the country to arrest or kill any foreigners in sight.
“I asked him [Arube] whose order it was to arrest Malera and why.
He did not explain, but I also remember him asking me, „Don‟t you
see the disappearance of people in Uganda?‟ And he also mentioned
Fr Kiggundu [editor of the Catholic Munno newspaper],” Kisule
says.
“He said if I did not arrest Malera, they [from Malire Mechanised
Specialised Regiment] he would come and attack our regiment. I
immediately telephoned the commander-in-chief [Amin]. I asked
him if it was him who had ordered for the arrest of Malera. He said
no.”
“So that night, I deployed my forces ready to fight the enemy, but
they did not come.”
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Asked what Amin‟s reaction to Arube‟s order to arrest Malera was,
Kisule says: “He didn‟t say anything about it, apart from telling me
that ambassador Ondoga had died.”
The inquiry
Although the inquiry was about “the Arube case”, the outcome was
rather about a different person – president Amin. Why?
“Amin went around the country and personally selected officers who
appeared before the commission as witnesses. One of them was an
operations officer from the State Research Centre/Bureau, who
reported directly to Amin about what every officer said before the
commission. All the high-ranking officers appeared before the
commission and all stressed the disappearing of Ugandans, ordered
by the presidential bodyguards, State Research Bureau, Military
Police and Public Safety Unit,” Kisule recalls.
Asked why the attempted coup was not mentioned at all in the
inquiry, Kisule said: “The planning of the coup was not mentioned
partly because most of the witnesses were Arube‟s friends.”
Kisule also adds that around September 1973, there was a world
peace conference held in Moscow, Russia, involving senior military
officers from other countries and he was a member of the Ugandan
delegation.
Kisule also recalls that it was shortly after Arube had returned from
Russian that the attempt coup occurred.
“There are two occasions in my life when I have felt like choking.
The first was the day I read that inquiry report and the second was
when I was arrested in 1979,” Kisule says.
“On that day, I almost failed to talk. Every time I opened my mouth
to say a word, I felt as if I was going to bite my tongue or choke.”
“Why?” I asked.
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“Do you know what it meant to sit next to Amin while [Isaac]
Malyamungu is standing behind you to ensure that you do not miss
a word? I felt threatened.”
Amin could not believe that Arube and Aseni, fellow West Nilers,
had plotted to oust him. And so, he wanted to know why.
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The military tribunal sat for the first time on June 4, 1974, at
Makindye Military Barracks in Kampala.
On June 4, 1974, the tribunal sat for the second time, according to
the records available.
Lt Col Aseni had just returned from exile from Congo, and as soon
as he returned, he was arrested and court marshalled.
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chairman of the military tribunal, to alter the judgment and
exonerate Aseni of all charges.
Aseni was, therefore, released and was later appointed to the USSR
as Uganda‟s ambassador.
On March 23, 1974, Brig Charles Arube and Lt Col Elly Aseni
wanted president Idi Amin ousted before midday. The two daring
soldiers from West Nile sub-region, Amin‟s home area, had plotted a
surprise coup and until Sunday March 23, the day of the coup, the
plot had remained a secret only to the two senior Uganda Army
soldiers.
After Arube and Aseni had masterminded the plot and were certain
that the coup was achievable, they decided to involve other soldiers.
And the right time to inform the trusted soldiers was on the day of
the coup – lest the plot leaked to Amin. This was also done to avoid
excitement among soldiers.
On the day of the coup, Brig Arube and Lt Col Aseni contacted then
2nd Lieutenant Isaac Bakka to join the coup. Bakka is the son of
Brig Barnabas Kili, who was the minister of education at the time.
The two senior officers met their junior, Bakka at his private home
on Plot 40 Rashid Khamis Road, Old Kampala, and in minutes, they
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had convinced him to join the coup plot because the reasons
forwarded were obvious.
“Can you tell us what happened when Arube and friends attempted
to oust Amin?” I asked Capt Bakka.
“After they had sat and settled, they introduced me to why they
were so early at my house, yet I was a junior officer.”
“They said the issue was the question of foreigners in the Ugandan
Army and other security forces that were doing a lot of bad things to
all Ugandans, including military personnel, civilians, members of
the public and the business community.”
“They said several people had been disappearing and their bodies
found thrown in bushes in various parts of Kampala and on
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highways and said this cannot continue without having something
done about it.”
“They [Arube and Aseni] had done their research and found that the
leadership [of the Uganda government] was adamant and indecisive,
as if it was involved. And they had even challenged the president
[Amin] about it. And this led them to find their own solution.”
“I asked them, „what solution do you have?‟” They said in the matter
where there is complacency by the top level, the solution is to get
rid of the leadership itself, because it was responsible.
“This led me to ask them why they thought that the leadership
[Uganda government] did not give them attention, that they thought
of other avenues to tackle the issue. They said „you cannot expect Lt
Col Ondoga [Michael], who was an ambassador to the Soviet Union
[Russia], to die like that‟. And Aseni said „you cannot expect leading
politicians like Ben Kiwanuka, Jolly Joe Kiwanuka of the
Democratic Party and some soldiers; Capt Kenneth Onzima, Capt
Jackson Avuduria and Lt Col Toroko – all from West Nile and had
been shot dead at Imperial Hotel [in Kampala] – to die like that‟.
They said this cannot be work of usual criminals. The State
machinery must be behind it.”
“They said Secret Service, the State Research, was manned by some
foreigners [Congolese, Sudanese and Rwandans trained by Mossad
and KGB spy agencies of Israel and Russia respectively].”
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of my knowledge, he was from Congo [a Nubian]. He spoke fluent
Rutoro.”
“These were people, in their [Arube and Aseni‟s] opinion, who issued
orders to their juniors and their juniors handled Ugandans
ruthlessly because they knew that if matters came to the worst,
they would simply run away to their countries and would not be
held responsible. The best thing was to get rid of them when they
were still here; corner them with their leader [Amin] and get rid all
of them.”
“When they said „we handle‟, I said „you and who?‟ They said „we
have some officers we are going to assign duties. Yours is to go to
Masindi [Artillery Regiment garrison], from there go to Bondo
[Barracks] in Arua and come via Gulu. Inform all our people
[soldiers] there to get hold of all the suspected foreigners in their
units. We are ordering that all people who are not Ugandans, who
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were illegally recruited in the armed forces and are responsible for
mass murder in Uganda, must be held responsible for their
crimes.‟”
“‟Because they are going to flee, we must blocked the road to Gulu.
The reason why we are sending you via Masindi is because the
Artillery Regiment in Masindi is at a strategic place, between
Kigumba and Karuma. That road must be blocked.‟”
“Each military unit was to sort out foreigners in its unit. The war
was on sorting out foreign nationals in Uganda security forces who
were only paying allegiance to the head of State [Amin] but not the
Uganda people. This was because their role here was only to make
money and if they spoiled our country, leaving Ugandans blaming
one another and killing one another, they would simply vanish
away.”
“Then they told me, „as we all come from West Nile – Arube and
Aseni were Kakwas from Koboko while I came from Maracha County
in Arua District – we must realise that we owe a lot to the future of
West Nile‟. They told me that all of us from West Nile must
understand that because people come to join the army under the
cover of being West Nilers, all their actions were going to be blamed
on West Nile children.”
“They said „in future other Ugandans will think West Nilers were
responsible for the death of their relatives, whereas it was not true.
West Nile was being used to recruit soldiers from Congo, from
South Sudan to be used [by Amin] for political ambitions. They have
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no regard for Uganda as a nation and for Ugandan citizens. But
then, Ugandans would not know that our brothers from West Nile
are not the ones who were killing them.‟ So I realised their
reasoning was true.”
“Did they (Arube and Aseni) tell you that they had already assigned
others?” I asked Bakka.
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“Yes.”
“He said he had already inquired and that this was an uprising
against Muslim leadership. He said Christians want Muslims to lose
this chance. He said „Obote was a Christian, [Sir Edward] Muteesa
was a Christian and now that time has come for Muslims to have a
chance, you people want to get rid of him.‟ So I left.”
“This man was Lt Col Gabriel, also a Christian. Gabriel did not
seem to accept my mission – because on arrival, he arrested me. He
said he needed further clarification. Luckily, Brig Arube had also
sent a similar message about the mission to Gen Mustafa Adrisi
who had travelled to Koboko,” Bakka says.
Upon his release, Bakka continued with his mission to Gulu, Lira,
Mbale, Jinja and back to Kampala. He says the entire journey took
him less than 10 hours.
Idi Amin was a member of the small Kakwa ethnic group of north-
western Uganda. His birthdate is unconfirmed, but estimated to
have been in 1925. His mother, a herbalist and diviner, raised him
after his father deserted the family. Amin had little formal education
before joining the King‟s African Rifles of the British colonial army
in 1946 as an assistant cook.
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