In Uganda, repression against opponents of the TotalEnergies project continues

The four students arrested on Friday September 15 in front of the Kampala Parliament while they were peacefully demonstrating against the oil exploitation project led by TotalEnergies in the west of the country and its giant EACOP pipeline (East African Crude Oil Pipeline) were kept in custody. detention following the hearing held Monday before the Bugoma Road court. They are accused of “public nuisance” and face a sentence of one year’s imprisonment under the penal code, depending on the charges served on them. One of them, Abdul Twaibu Magambo, was beaten during his arrest, said his lawyer Me Alexander Kafeero and calls for emergency medical attention. He was allowed to have a visit from his doctor.

Read also: Uganda: insurer Marsh’s support for the Eacop pipeline project targeted by complaint to the OECD

A new hearing is scheduled for Wednesday September 20 to plead a request for release on bail pending their trial. “The government’s aim is to silence climate activists. However, we consider that they have not committed any offense by wanting to express themselves on the consequences of the TotalEnergies project. The Ugandan Constitution recognizes the right to protest”defends Me Kafeero.

The harassment suffered by climate activists – accused of being against the development of the country – or against farmers who refuse the conditions of expropriation of their land is a constant practice. “It has become very difficult to demonstrate and gather. Some students, identified like me as activists from the start, are constantly worried by the police, wherever they go and whatever they do. We are afraid for our lives. In a country where freedom of expression is considered a threat by the government, it is obviously difficult to bring others into our cause.”confides one of them, on condition of anonymity.

The symbol of climate control projects

The silence that the government would like to impose is being responded to beyond Uganda’s borders by the most important international campaign against the opening of new oil fields. EACOP and its 1,440 km of heated oil pipeline between Uganda and Tanzania, its influence on protected natural areas and its tens of thousands of displaced people has become the symbol of climaticidal projects at a time when the time should be for withdrawal fossil fuels to prevent the worst effects of global warming.

In the streets of New York, Sunday September 17, banners against EACOP opened the great march for the climate organized on the eve of the opening of the United Nations General Assembly and the summit on climate ambition convened by the Secretary General, Antonio Guterres. Among them, the founder of the Ugandan branch of the Fridays for Future movement, Hilda Nakabuye, called for the immediate release of the students and respect for human rights in Uganda. TotalEnergies, deemed complicit in the authoritarian regime of Yoweri Museveni, has once again been arrested.

Read also: TotalEnergies faces justice again for its oil exploitation megaproject in Uganda

The project is also the target of the call launched by 300 scientists in favor of a treaty on the non-proliferation of fossil fuels. “If the EACOP has become emblematic of climate control projects, it is because it highlights the obvious contradiction between the climate commitments displayed by the fossil fuel majors such as TotalEnergies and their actions. Most of these companies have committed to achieving net zero emissions by 2050. However, as of May 2022, a scientific study identified 425 large fossil extraction projects around the world, called “carbon bombs”, whose combined potential emissions would represent twice the carbon budget not to be exceeded to maintain 1.5°C of global warming.they wrote to the States gathered in New York.

Under pressure from NGOs including Reclaim Finance, 26 banks and 23 insurers have committed not to finance or insure the project, the amount of which is estimated at 10.5 billion dollars (9.8 billion euros). TotalEnergies would seek to raise $3.5 billion to complete its investment.

source site-30