Muslim Villagers in Eastern Uganda Kill Christian Woman, Infant Girl, Sources Say
By Jeremy Reynalds, Senior Correspondent, ASSIST News Service (jeremyreynalds@gmail.com )
EASTERN UGANDA (ANS-July 7, 2016) --
Muslim villagers in eastern Uganda last week killed a Christian woman
for refusing to allow a mosque on her property, and in the same district
Muslim relatives of a young Christian mother poisoned her baby, sources
said.
According
to a story by Morning Star News, a local source said Efranse Kadondo, a
50-year-old Catholic of Naigobya village, Kiyunga Sub-County in Luuka
District, had resisted relatives' pressure in March to donate part of
her land for construction of a mosque.
One of her Muslim relatives, Zainabu Kasubuza, pressured her along with some imams, the source said.
He
said Kadondo had told him, “I told Zainabu that if I have to surrender
part of my land, then I will give it to the Catholic Church. This
angered Zainabu, who forcefully chased me away with some imams who had
accompanied him.”
Kadondo
took refuge at a relative's place in a nearby village, and on June 17
she reported the seizure of her land to police in Lakabuku, seeking
orders for the return of her property, according to an officer who
requested anonymity.
Six days later, Kadondo was killed after an all-night prayer meeting, Morning Star News reported sources said.
“Efranse
attended an overnight prayer meeting at our parish on June 22 and left
at around 4 a.m. on June 23, and later we heard the sad news that she
was found dead in her house,” a Kiroba parish priest told Morning Star
News.
Kadondo's
relative had spotted some Muslims lingering around the place where she
was harboring her that evening, including a neighbor named Shaban Waida,
she said.
“I
saw Shaban with some other people near my house in the evening,” she
said. “The next morning, Efranse did not show up, so I decided to go to
her house, only to see police around the house the evening of June 23
with Shaban and a number of people.”
Police
told her that Kadondo's body was lying in blood with broken hands and
bruises around her neck inside a room of the house, she said, and that a
neighbor had informed officers of plans to secretly bury her that
evening.
“Those present with the police included Shaban Waida,” she said. “I suspect (ed) it must be Waida and his goons.”
Police
arrested Waida, 40, Shafia Mudondo, 41, Jamira Kasubo, 45, Sumein
Namulondo, 50, Kitesi Kowa, and Simewo Wambi, 70, in connection with the
death.
The
relative who pressured Kadondo for her land, Kasubuza, and the
chairperson of Local Council 1, which has authority over Naigobya
village, identified only as Bagoole, have absconded along with other
alleged accomplices, sources said.
Police
took Kadondo's body to Nakavure Hospital in Iganga District for an
autopsy, and police told Morning Star News that the post-mortem report
confirmed she was murdered. The body later was brought back for burial
at her relative's property.
Kadondo was a widow who apparently had no children.
About
85 percent of the people in Uganda are Christian and 11 percent Muslim,
with some eastern areas having large Muslim populations. The country's
constitution and other laws provide for religious freedom, including the
right to propagate one's faith and convert from one faith to another.
Baby Poisoned
A week earlier, also in Luuka District, Muslim in-laws poisoned the infant daughter of 24-year-old Christian mother Angel Nabirye, Morning Star News reported sources said.
A week earlier, also in Luuka District, Muslim in-laws poisoned the infant daughter of 24-year-old Christian mother Angel Nabirye, Morning Star News reported sources said.
In
Busandha village, Kiloba Parish, Bukanga Sub-County, Nabirye's
mother-in-law noted that she was eating during the day-time fast of
Ramadan.
“My
mother-in-law questioned me for eating food with my baby during
Ramadan, and I told her that the baby was unwell and needs
breast-feeding,” Nabirye told Morning Star News.
Islam
does not require non-Muslims, young children or those who are ill to
fast during Ramadan, but Nabirye's mother-in-law, Nubu Kiiza, informed
her son, Nabirye's 30-year-old Muslim husband Ayubu Meddie Kamwa, that
she was failing to observe Ramadan.
The following day, on the morning of June 17, Kiiza visited Nabirye.
“She
brought some herbs for my baby, Saidha Namwase, which I gave her,”
Nabirye said. “After three hours, the condition of the baby worsened,
and I rushed her to Iganga Hospital, but she was pronounced dead on
arrival at 4 p.m.”
A doctor immediately took several tests and found the baby had been poisoned, Nabirye said.
Morning
Star News reported that Nabirye's husband, Kamwa, sent relatives to the
hospital to retrieve the body for burial. They returned with the
infant's body at 7 p.m. and wanted to bury it immediately in accordance
with Islamic custom, but Nabirye protested because she wanted her
relatives to be present for the burial, she said.
Her
husband and mother-in law were furious with her for refusing to bury
the body immediately, and they along with other relatives started
berating her and calling her an infidel and pagan, Nabirye said.
Nabirye's
mother and siblings, all Christians, arrived later that night. Their
in-laws served them a tea that included chloroform, which caused them to
fall asleep, Nabirye said. When they awoke the next morning, Nabirye's
sister discovered the baby's body was missing, and a frantic search
ensued.
Nabirye's
husband, mother-in-law, father-in-law, and an imam, Alamzan Waiswa,
called Nabirye an infidel for refusing to immediately bury the baby's
body, and they started beating her, her mother and sister for
disrespecting Ramadan, she said.
The Muslim in-laws told them to leave, but when they refused to go, the beating continued, Nabirye said.
Neighbors intervened and stopped the attack, and officers soon arrived from Nakabugu police station.
“Nabirye
had a deep cut on her face and an injured right hand, while her
relatives had light injuries on the face, hands and back,” Morning Star
News reported a source said who met her at the police station.
Police
and neighbors searched without success for the infant's body. Officers
later arrested Nabirye's husband Kamwa, Imam Waiswa, Kiiza and her
husband, identified only as 58-year-old Suleiman, for questioning by
Luuka District authorities.
For more information visit www.morningstarnews.org
Photo
captions: 1) Nubu Kiiza and husband Suleiman, Muslim in-laws of
Christian mother who lost her infant daughter.(Morning Star News). 2)
Eastern Ugandan Christians protesting the ongoing violence against their
community. 3) Jeremy and Elma Reynalds.
About
the writer: Jeremy Reynalds is Senior Correspondent for the ASSIST News
Service, a freelance writer and also the founder and CEO of Joy
Junction, New Mexico's largest emergency homeless shelter,
www.joyjunction.org. He has a master's degree in communication from the
University of New Mexico, and a Ph.D. in intercultural education from
Biola University in Los Angeles. His newest book is "From Destitute to
Ph.D." Additional details on the book are available at www.myhomelessjourney.com. Reynalds lives in Albuquerque, New Mexico with his wife, Elma. For more information contact: Jeremy Reynalds at jeremyreynalds@gmail.com .
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