What we do:
Promotion and protection of Human Rights:
Human rights are not created or granted by any State, rather, they exist by virtue of our existence as human beings and protect our inherent human dignity. They are regarded as universal, innaliable, and interrelated because, they are not limited to state borders, and they apply to all human beings regardless of their nationality, color, ethnic group, language, religion, sex, among others. In fact, human rights aim at promoting the integral development of a human being and that is why, it is Important for a comprehensive interpretation of civil and political rights as well as economic, social, and cultural rights. The entire world affirmed to these rights in the United Nations Declaration for Human rights in 1948 and in its preamble, it emphasizes that, “the inherent dignity and of the equal and inalienable rights of all members of the human family is the foundation of freedom, justice and peace in the world”. The affirmation on fundamental rights was later transformed into state commitments and obligations under the seven core human rights treaties. Therefore, in whatever governments do, the important aspect must be the centrality of human beings and countries must be committed to the Four-Fold Human Rights Principles of respecting, promotion, protection and fulfilment of its international obligations towards those fundamental rights and freedoms.
However, since 2011, Uganda as a member of the U.N and a signatory to the core-international treaties on human rights has witnessed a horrible period of excessive police brutality such as torture, unlawful arrests, beating, unlawful killings, and the establishment of safe houses across the country. These violations continue to desecrate the sanctity of human dignity through public humiliation and torture. Throughout the years, security agencies (Police officers, special forces, UPDF, and Local Defense Units) repeatedly used excessive force while arresting suspects, especially women, and unlawfully deployed heavy weapons like tear gas, heavy sticks, and rubber bullets against protesters. There have been cases of indiscriminate killings of civilians and their properties , and on many occasions, there have been reported cases of kidnap and disappearances, torture in detention places and a curtail to the freedom of expression and access to justice.
Despite the available reports on these gross violations, often, there are no procedures to bring to justice those officers who shoot to kill unarmed civilians and there is no remedy to those who have been humiliated and tortured by security forces. Therefore, our overall goal is to ensure that each person in Uganda lives in the dignity that he or she deserves, to ensure that the Ugandan government improves the protection of the fundamental rights, to ensure that civilians and law enforcers know their rights and duties, and to bring to account those acts that contradicts the law.
Thus, Freedom Uganda focuses on two main objectives:
(1) Advocacy and rule of law: Understanding the idea that advocacy is necessary for policy reform, capacity building on the basic human rights principles, Freedom Uganda is taking a bottom-up approach by empowering local populations and institutions to ensure that all peoples live in dignity and respect human rights. This is done through regular webinars, dissemination of information and materials, and human rights training.
(2) Human rights database: We are convinced that having statistical records is key to improving human rights protection and it increases credibility to recommendations and policy reform in a country. Therefore, with the help of our team and volunteers, we maintain a database on first- hand human rights violations in Uganda. We record and report incidents directly from victims and eyewitnesses across the country.