In its plan to attract tourists, the
Uganda government is building a war museum to showcase the darkest
moments from its history, including the atrocities of former President,
late Idi Amin.
Atrocities committed under Amin’s brutal eight-year rule and by the Lord’s Resistance Army (LRA) are to be documented.
“We want to put the record straight,” Uganda Tourism Board chief executive Stephen Asiimwe, said.
“History gets richer, it’s like red wine – it gets more interesting as the years go by,” Mr Asiimwe said.
He said that the project was not intended to be insensitive or voyeuristic.
“I lived through the Idi Amin era as a young boy, my fellow students lost their parents to the regime,” he said.
“However you cannot run away from history. These are facts.”
Mr Asiimwe said every destination has its own traditional culture and attractions.
“In Uganda we have wildlife – mountain gorillas. But we are trying to retrace the past.”
Showcasing Uganda’s history would make the East African country a richer place for tourists to visit, he added.
More recently, Ugandans have had to deal
with the LRA, which has claimed to be fighting to install a government
based on the Biblical Ten Commandments.
Formed in Uganda more than two decades
ago, the group became notorious for chopping off people’s limbs and
abducting children to use as soldiers and sex slaves.
Its leader, Joseph Kony, is wanted for
war crimes and the group continues to operate in northern Democratic
Republic of Congo and eastern Central African Republic.
He was the subject of the #Kony2012
social media campaign six years ago which detailed his alleged crimes.
An online video became a viral sensation with more than 100 million
views.
The Uganda war museum will also showcase pre-colonial and colonial history.
Colonial records were systematically
destroyed by Britain in a purge known as “operation legacy”. But the war
museum is expected to document some events from the period.
Construction has not yet begun, but the museum already has its detractors.
John Sempebwa, the deputy executive
director of the tourism board, told VOA he disagrees with his colleagues
who suggest Ugandans are ready to revisit the more painful details of
their past.
“Society is divided. There are people
who are still around who don’t have good memories of Amin. Now, not only
won’t they come, they might burn this place down,” he said. (NAN)
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