Ernest Obitre Gama Explained

Ernest Obitre Gama
Office:Minister of Internal Affairs of Uganda
Predecessor:Basil Kiiza Bataringaya
Successor:Charles Oboth Ofumbi
Termend:12 October 1973
Termstart:2 February 1971
Office2:Ugandan Ambassador to Japan
President2:Yoweri Museveni
Termend2:1987
Termstart2:1986
Office3:Ugandan ambassador to Italy
President3:Yoweri Museveni
Termend3:1988
Termstart3:1987
Office4:Ugandan ambassador to Sudan
President4:Yoweri Museveni
Termend4:April 1995
Termstart4:1988
Birth Date:1940 1, df=y
Birth Place:Olevu, British Uganda
(present-day Uganda)
Nationality:Ugandan
Spouse:Zilipah Enaru
Children:Six Children with his wife, including Judy Obitre–Gama, Eyoki Obitre Gama, Jocelyn Obitre Gama, Robina Obitre Gama, Afimani Obitre Gama, and Gordon Obitre Gama. He also claims to have other children
Alma Mater:Busoga College
President:Idi Amin
Residence:Arua, West Nile sub-region, Northern Region, Uganda
Serviceyears:1964 - 1979
Allegiance:Uganda Army
Battles:

    Ernest Obitre Gama (born 1 November 1940) is a Ugandan former military officer and diplomat. He was the first military officer in Uganda to become a diplomat, and was appointed Minister of Internal Affairs by Idi Amin.[1] He later was the Ugandan ambassador to Japan, Italy, and Sudan under Yoweri Museveni.[2]

    Early life

    Ernest Obitre Gama was born into a Lugbara family of farmers in the West Nile sub-region in the Northern Region of Uganda.[3] He was born in the village of Olevu, in Maracha Town, in the West Nile sub-region on 15 November in 1940.[4] He was orphaned at a young age, and did not attend school until he was 12 years old.

    Education

    Obitre Gama attended local schools in Maracha Town area from 1952 to 1960, when, at the age of 20, he enrolled in Busoga College, a boarding secondary school located at Mwiri Hill in the Jinja District of Uganda. He earned his school certificate in 1963. His goal was to become a marine engineer and work in Mombasa, Kenya, but his guardians objected and told him to enlist in the Uganda People's Defence Force.

    Career

    Armed Forces

    On 5 June 1964, Obitre Gama joined the Uganda Army.[5] In January 1965 he was commissioned and went to the Specialist Weapons School at Battlesbury Barracks in Warminster, Wiltshire in the United Kingdom where was trained to be a platoon commander.[6] Upon his return to Uganda he was immediately sent to Zaire, but after a short time in Zaire he became the director of the Officer Cadet's Training School in Jinja, Uganda. In Jinja, Uganda, he performed the first paratroop jump by a Ugandan paratrooper in Ugandan airspace. This was also when he first met Idi Amin.

    After serving as the director of the Officer Cadet's Training School in Jinja, Uganda, Obitre Gama travelled extensively on behalf of the Uganda People's Defence Force. In December 1967 he attended advanced military training in India, then went to the Defence Services Staff College in Wellington, New Zealand, after which he traveled to Israel for a five-month long course in parachute training.[7] Following his parachute training course in Israel, Obitre Gama became the commandant and founder of the Ugandan School of Paratroopers. In 1969, Obitre Gana went on a tour of India, the Soviet Union, and Czechoslovakia where he represented the Uganda People's Defence Force.

    When the 1971 Ugandan coup d'état occurred on 25 January 1971, Obitre Gama was working in Trinidad and Tobago. He was sent by President Apollo Milton Obote to represent Uganda as a member of the Commonwealth of Nations who were assisting in the military tribunals of members of the Black Power Revolution, a series of demonstrations and strikes that attempted to effect socio-political change in Trinidad and Tobago. Obitre Gama was observing the trials of Raffique Shah and Rex Lassalle, members of the Trinidad and Tobago Defence Force who mutinied in response to Prime Minister of Trinidad and Tobago Eric Williams calling a state of emergency and arresting leaders of the Black Power Revolution.[8]

    Minister of Internal Affairs

    Following the 1971 Ugandan coup d'état, Idi Amin called for Obitre Gama to return to Uganda immediately. Obitre Gama learned of the coup d'état in his home country through a BBC Radio broadcast. He was appointed to be Minister of Internal Affairs on 2 February, replacing the imprisoned and soon-to-be executed Basil Kiiza Bataringaya.[9] He was the first soldier to be a member of the Cabinet of Uganda, a role he tried to turn down and a role he did not seek. Obitre Gama's most influential action as Minister of Internal Affairs was leading a mechanized battalion to restore order to Kampala in February 1972 following ethnic conflict within the city.

    Cracks quickly emerged between Obitre Gama and Idi Amin. Obitre Gama refused to promote Juma Butabika,[10] the violent Idi Amin ally, to the role of Senior Superintendent of Police out of what Obitre Gama described as concerns for his violent behavior. In May 1972, Amin allegedly snubbed a hand shake from Obitre Gama at a conference at Serena Hotel, Kampala, saying "I don't want to see you. You want to overthrow me". The ever erratic Idi Amin actually followed this by appointing Obitre Gama to be Minister of Power, Transport, and Communication in June 1972, a role that he served concurrently with his role as Minister of Internal Affairs, although he was retired from both roles by Idi Amin "for the public interest". Charles Oboth Ofumbi replaced Obitre Gama as Minister of Internal Affairs.[11]

    Interim Period

    Obitre Gama returned to his home in Olevu in Maracha Town following his retirement from Minister of Internal Affairs. In 1979, during the Uganda–Tanzania War, the Uganda Army attempted to recall Obitre Gama back into the armed forces, but he declined. He did not flee into the Democratic Republic of the Congo nine kilometers from his home like many other former Idi Amin officials,[12] rather he stayed when the Tanzania People's Defence Force came in and met with new Ugandan President Godfrey Binaisa who promised Obitre Gama safety and allegedly asked Obitre Gama to become Minister of Minerals, a position Obitre Gama declined. Obitre Gama kept a low profile during the second Apollo Milton Obote administration.

    Ambassador for Museveni

    When Yoweri Museveni took power, Obitre Gama reentered Ugandan political life, this time as a diplomat. He was appointed Ambassador to Japan in 1986, then Ambassador to Italy in 1987, and Sudan in 1988. He remained as ambassador to Sudan until 1995, when Uganda suspended relations with Sudan following Ugandan military assistance of the rebel Sudan People's Liberation Army and their sending of Ugandan troops into Sudan.[13]

    Life after Politics

    Obitre Gama has worked since 2000 as the Chairman of the Amnesty Commission's North-Western Region Directorate. The Amnesty Commission came out of the Amnesty Act of 2000 which states that "any forces that are fighting the government (of Uganda) and wish to give-up are free to report and will be forgiven when they denounce their activities".[14]

    Personal life

    Obitre Gama is a diabetic.

    Obitre Gama married Zilipah Enaru before he became Minister of Internal Affairs. He lives with her in the same house in Olevu in Maracha Town since he left the Ministry of Internal Affairs. Obitre Gama has six children with his wife, including Eyoki Obitre Gama, Jocelyn Obitre Gama, Robina Obitre Gama, Afimani Obitre Gama, Gordon Obitre Gama, and Judy Obitre–Gama, the former Executive Director of the National Identification and Registration Authority in Uganda, previous Board Secretary of the Uganda Registration Services Bureau, and is a noted scholar and environmental lawyer.[15] [16] [17] [18] [19] He also claimed in an interview with Sidney Miria of the New Vision newspaper to have other children.

    Obitre Gama was a noted sportsman as well, winning Ugandan-wide competitions in Rugby union and Squash.

    Bibliography

    Notes and References

    1. News: I was forced to be minister. Mugabe. Faustin. 10 October 2015. Daily Monitor. 16 April 2019. https://web.archive.org/web/20190416172007/https://www.monitor.co.ug/News/Insight/-I-was-forced-to-be-minister-/688338-2906230-bfwjl6z/index.html. 16 April 2019. Kampala, Uganda.
    2. News: Uganda: Obitre-Gama -Soldier, Diplomat and Father. Miria. Sidney. 19 September 2009. All Africa. 16 April 2019. New Vision.
    3. Book: Mediavilla, Victor Herrero. African Biographical Archive. 1973. Munich. 286.
    4. Book: Africa South of the Sahara 1973: Third edition of a survey and reference book of the countries south of the Sahara presented in a continental perspective. Europa Publisher. 1973. Third. London, the United Kingdom. 285.
    5. Book: Africa South of the Sahara 1973: Third edition of a survey and reference book of the countries south of the Sahara presented in a continental perspective. Europa. 1973. London, the United Kingdom. 288.
    6. Web site: Specialist Weapons School, Warminser. Army UK.
    7. Book: Who's who in Africa: The Political, Military and Business Leaders of Africa. Dickie. John. Rake. Alan. Alan Rake. African Development. 1973. 9780950275505. London, the United Kingdom. 287. en.
    8. Teelucksingh. Jerome. 2014. The Black Power Movement in Trinidad and Tobago. Black Diaspora Review. 4. 1. 157–186. 2334-1521.
    9. Book: Decker, Alicia C.. In Idi Amin's Shadow: Women, Gender, and Militarism in Uganda. 15 November 2014. Ohio University Press. 9780821445020. en. https://web.archive.org/web/20190112062034/https://books.google.com/books?id=9JKdBAAAQBAJ&pg=PT18&lpg=PT18&dq=interior+Minister+Basil+Bataringaya&source=bl&ots=V7JPoMUyWD&sig=oCKH0oOH8nURhJ9itEeRTGVJjeY&hl=en&sa=X&ved=2ahUKEwjJhrnogL7fAhUOq1kKHZiQDzsQ6AEwF3oECAAQAQ#v=onepage&q=interior%20Minister%20Basil%20Bataringaya&f=false. 12 January 2019.
    10. Web site: The ideological direction of NRM MPs is fascism. Alan Tacca. 11 August 2013. Daily Monitor. 14 October 2018. 14 October 2018. https://web.archive.org/web/20181014203957/http://www.monitor.co.ug/OpEd/columnists/AllanTacca/The-ideological-direction-of-NRM-MPs-is-fascism/878694-1943240-w1xua/index.html. dead.
    11. News: Uganda Minister of Health Defects; Tells of Killings Ordered by Amin. 5 June 1977. The New York Times. 24 February 2019.
    12. Web site: Lake Edward: The source of Uganda, DRC row DW 12 July 2018. Welle (www.dw.com). Deutsche. DW.COM. 17 April 2019.
    13. Book: Peace in the balance: the crisis in the Sudan. Brian Raftopoulos and Karin Alexander. African Minds. 2006. 19.
    14. Web site: Amnesty Commission. Ministry of Internal Affairs: Republic of Uganda. 2019. Ministry of Internal Affairs: Republic of Uganda. https://web.archive.org/web/20190417184226/https://www.mia.go.ug/department/amnesty-commission. 17 April 2019. 17 April 2019.
    15. Web site: John . New Vision. Kampala. National Registration Authority to oversee ID issuance. Masaba . 26 May 2016 . 23 July 2015.
    16. Web site: Message From The Executive Director. Kampala. 2015. 26 May 2016. National Identification and Registration Authority (NIRA). NIRA.
    17. Web site: Stock market top dog fights boot. Mbanga. Jeff. 5 November 2009. Kampala. 26 May 2016. The Observer. 30 June 2016. https://web.archive.org/web/20160630070408/http://www.observer.ug/component/content/article?id=5843:stock-market-top-dog-fights-boot. dead.
    18. Web site: Women's Center for Job Creation: Judy Obitre–Gama, Uganda – Director. WCFJC. 2013. Women's Center for Job Creation (WCFJC). Brooklyn Park, MN. 26 May 2016. https://web.archive.org/web/20160525185817/http://www.wcfjc.org/director/judy-obitre-gama-uganda-%E2%80%93-director. 25 May 2016. dead.
    19. Web site: Ms. Judy Obitre–Gama. URSB. 2015. Uganda Registration Services Bureau (URSB). Kampala. 26 May 2016.