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Somalia: Soldier jailed
over Somalia affair
Monday 26 October 2009 Shaaficiyah Media
A UPDF soldier who impregnated a Somali woman,
Ms Omar Ninho, has become the first victim of the violation
of an executive order for the African Union peacekeepers in
conflict-ridden Somalia not to engage in love affairs.
The Court Martial sitting at the General Headquarters
Bombo last week convicted a Warrant Officer II, Joshua Asisa
to one-and-a half years in imprisonment after it found him
guilty of impregnating Ms Ninho while on a peace-keeping mission
in Somalia. Ms Ninhos age was not disclosed.
According to the army Spokesperson Lt Col
Felix Kulayigye, indulging Somali Women into any sexual conduct,
tantamounts to a mischief and contravenes the AMISOM
Operation Standing Procedures and to the prejudice of the
good order and discipline of the UPDF.
The Court Martial, chaired by Brig.
Steven Kashaka, ruled that WOII Asisa was guilty of conduct
prejudicial to good order and discipline contrary to the UPDF
Act,Mr Kulayigye said in a statement.
He added: (WOII Asisa) was tried on
October 20, 2009, found guilty, and sentenced to one-and-a-half
years detention at Makindye Military Police Barracks
Prison.
Flagging off the UPDF peace-keepers to Somalia
in March 2007, President Museveni warned the soldiers against
illicit love affairs with Somali women.
I have heard that you went to doctors
who found out that you do not have these dudus (read HIV/AIDS).
Take care of your lives when you go to Somalia,
Mr Museveni told his soldiers. Sitting on the Court Martial
that tried WOII Asisas case were Capt. LR Otaget as
judge advocate, Elizabeth Kodil Nyasingwa as presecutor, Lt
Fred Wairugala as defence lawyer and Lt DD Epalu as court
secretary.
The biggest AU peace-keepers mission
to Somalia is to empower the Somalis to rebuild their state
and their army and disarm any group still holding guns illegally.
However, there are unconfirmed reports that
some UPDF soldiers occasionally take time off to engage in
illicit love, in total breach of the rules.
An AU peacekeeping force of 4,300 troops from
Uganda and Burundi is propping up the Somali government, which
is trembling under a fierce onslaught by Islamist insurgents,
al-Shabaab and Hizbul Islam.
Also the peacekeepers have faced repeated
accusations of responding to roadside bombs and other attacks
by randomly opening fire on civilians.
Shaaficiyah Media
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