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Idi amin |
From 1971 to 79, Idi Amin was the brutal ruler of the small African kingdom of Uganda. It is estimated that between one lakh and one lakh people were killed during the reign of Eid Amin, who was the culprit of all manner of evils, including mass murder and mass murder.
Though a bit exaggerated, it has been recorded in some histories that the Eid Amiin was a cannibal.
Jenicha Amin was born in 1925 in Kokoba, West Nile Province. He began his career as a civilian in the British colonial army in Uganda in 1946. Amin played a key role in the 1952 war against the Somali rebels in Kenya.
Amin was 6 feet 4 inches tall and had an equal body. He was also the national boxing champion in Uganda from 1951 to 1960.
By 1970, Amin had risen to the rank of commander of the Ugandan army. However, the palace of King Muteza II of Amin was invaded and the king was deported to Britain. Soon a tussle broke out between Prime Minister Milton Obote and Amin. On January 25, 1971, Amin seized the sovereignty of Uganda with the intention of arresting Oboto Amin. Prime Minister Milton Oboto was attending the Commonwealth Summit in Singapore at the time.
At the time of his first conquest of power, "I am just a soldier."
A week later, Eid Amin declared himself the President of Uganda, the Commander-in-Chief of the entire army, and placed the Military Tribunal above the Supreme Court. But Prime Minister "Oboto", who refused to sit idly by, arrived in Tanzania, gathering Ugandan refugees there and in 1972 launched a coup attempt against Amin. But the weakened echo quickly dissipated. Oboteye was assisted by two tribes: "Lango" and "Acholi". In retaliation, Amin massacred 5,000 soldiers of the two tribes at Barak. Amin killed nearly twice as many civilians. According to Amnesty International, close to 80,000 people were killed from both tribes.
Amin defeated his own tribe, the Kakwas, and the mercenaries from South Sudan, and, for that reason, escaped the attempted coup eight times.
The backbone of the Ugandan economy was the legacy of Indians who emigrated to Uganda under British rule. Sixty thousand of them used British passports. In August 1974, Amin declared "the economic war. Except for doctors, teachers, lawyers, etc., all of them were ordered to leave Uganda immediately. All of them left behind their own businesses and plantations." They did not know how to operate the lam, and they were not able to manage and manage them in a Christian way.
Amin had a close relationship with Uganda, East Germany and Libya, and Saudi at that time.
An Air France plane that flew from Tel Aviv, Israel, in June 1978 was taken down by pro-Palestinian militants and landed at Uganda's "Entebbe" airport. There, 156 people without an Israeli passport were released and allowed to leave safely.
This has severely damaged Amin's relationship with foreign countries. Britain in the event abandoned all diplomatic ties with Uganda.
The cement factory, run by people of Indian origin, and the large sugarcane plantation, the Panjasara factory, and the pulp production, were shut down due to mismanagement. The corpses of the people who are being taken away by the military are no more. Along the way, the shoe was full of disrespectful shoes.
In just eight years, Uganda has lost 75% of its elephants, 98% of its species, 90% of crocodiles, and 80% of lions. All were killed by the Ammin and the Sylvan bandits and sent abroad.
The Christians of the Adi Amin tribe had converted to Islam before. Amin, who was not a big believer in life, had to dust off his old religious beliefs to get help from Saudi and Libya. This gave rise to a new awakening among the oppressed Muslims, and they led to the backing of Amin. Naturally, this became an attack on the native Christians. This led to the assassination of Janani Luwuma, archbishop of the Church of Uganda. Nobody could even come close to Amin, the illiterate ex-fighter. He killed those who were close enough to him for simple purposes.
In a similar vein, Shrimichu Amin is accused of murdering his vice-president "Mustafa Idrisi" in an accusation. But the army loyal to Mustafa Idrisi protested. Aidi Amin moved against them.
Some of them entered Tanzania to save their lives. Behind them Amin's army crossed the Tanzania border. With this, the sovereign state of Tanzania rallied against Uganda. The “Ugandan National Liberation Army” was formed by Ugandans fleeing Uganda. They too, together with the Tanzanian forces, confronted Amin's forces. Libyan leader Muammar Gaddafi prays for helping Amin by sending 3,000 troops but it has not been successful
On April 11, 1979, the rebel forces invaded the Ugandan capital of Kambala. Aidi Amin escaped to Libya in a helicopter. Amin escaped to Jeddah, Saudi Arabia. Saudi Amin sought refuge in a bid to stay out of politics. Amin lived for many years in the upper two floors of the "Novatel" hotel on Palestine Road in Jeddah. Eager to return to Uganda, Amin arrived in the neighboring country "Kogo" in 1989 under the leadership of Colonel Juma Oris, a coup attempt in Uganda, but Koga's leadership sent Amin back to Jeddah.
In July 2009, Amin fell unconscious at the King Faisal Specialty Hospital in Jeddah. That year, on 16 August, while still unconscious, Field Marshal Alhaji Doctor Idi Amin Dada, one of the most ruthless rulers the modern world has ever seen, succumbed to the inevitable death.
Amin's beloved wife, Sarah Koiloba, "Suicide Sarah," who had 45 children with seven wives, died a few days ago in London.
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