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In 1979, as Amin's stranglehold on power slipped, he recalled all foreign ambassadors. Reports of the murders of those diplomats who returned filtered back, and my father sought refugee status in the U.S. for himself and his family. I was seven at the time. Now flash forward 24 years. Amin ultimately escaped lurching into Saudi Arabia, that great friend of the United States. Amin had been Muslim, spewed anti-Semitic rhetoric, supported Arab nations, and was something of a martyr to the Arab world because of the notorious events at Entebbe. He wound up with four wives and a vast stipend from those stalwart allies of the Bush administration, the House of Saud. And now, after Uganda had righted itself, and my family had expelled the residual toxins of the era, the old dictator had fallen into a coma; fancy that. At the end of July, an employee of the King Faisal Specialist Hospital told the AP, on condition of anonymity, that "Amin came in with high blood pressure and since then has suffered kidney failure." Amin has been in a coma since then; he is believed to be about 80 years old. Hearing that this bogeyman monster of my paranoid '70s childhood was 80 and in a coma over kidney failure should have awakened a sense of pathos, but, to be honest, it hasn't. There is currently a huge debate in Uganda over Amin because his family has asked the current Ugandan president, Yoweri Museveni, to allow him to return from exile for burial. Museveni's government has refused, saying Amin would be allowed to return to the country only to stand trial for crimes. These are, quite frankly, my thoughts exactly. Unfortunately, on July 23, 2003, President Museveni reversed himself at a workshop on the northern Uganda conflict at the International Conference Center. In the speech, Museveni said that Amin's family could bring back the body if the dictator died in exile. "But we shall not give him state honors," he added. "He will be buried like any other ordinary Ugandan." In the end, what are a couple hundred thousand dead Ugandans when burial honors are at stake? I cannot forgive Idi Amin for the deaths of members of my family or for his tyranny nor can I find the compassion in my heart to remain silent on his final burial place. As far as I'm concerned, until we citizens of the world relegate tyrants to the lowest rung of the ladder of humanity, the position will continue to hold allure. Idi Amin seized power in 1971, the year of my birth, from Milton Obote, who was away on a foreign visit. Obote, the exiled former dictator who headed the murderous "General Service Unit" in the 1960s, e-mailed the state-owned New Vision last week, urging the government to allow Amin's body back for burial. Raptors of a feather stick together, it seems. Ron Mwangaguhunga is former editor of MacDirectory. He lives in Brooklyn, N.Y. |
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