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Amin of Uganda,general amin uganda,idi amin dada uganda,idi amin of uganda


Amin was the most cruel president Uganda has ever seen. On this page we guide you about all you need to know about Idi Dada as the president of the republic of Uganda.



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Idi Amin and his coup was widely welcomed, as there was hope that the country would finally be unified. Several Western nations, including Britain, who feared the spread of communism, were also relieved at Obote’s overthrow:they had become suspicious that his policies were moving to the left.Click here to read about first Obote regime



He promised a return to civilian government in five years, but problems with his leadership were soon apparent. He had little Western-style education and virtually no officer training, so he often resorted to arbitrary violence in order to maintain his position.

In one incident, he destroyed the one potential centre of effective opposition by a wholesale slaughter of senior army officers loyal to Obote.



To win more general support among the Ugandan population,he ordered all Asians who had not taken Ugandan nationality to leave the country in 1972. His move won considerable approval in the country because many Africans believed that they had been exploited by the Asians, who controlled the middle and some of the higher levels of the economy, but the action isolated Uganda from the rest of the world community.

Although a few wealthy Ugandans profited from Amin’s actions, the majority of the commercial enterprises formerly owned by Asians were given to senior army officers who rapidly squandered the proceeds and then allowed the businesses to collapse.

Most people in the countryside were able to survive the total breakdown of the economy that followed in the mid- and late 1970s because the fertility of Uganda’s soil allowed them to continue growing food. In the towns an all-pervading black market developed, and dishonesty became the only means of survival.

This economic and moral collapse stirred up criticism of the government, and during this period the country experienced several serious coup attempts.Click here to get more information on Uganda civil wars



In an attempt to divert attention from Uganda’s internal problems, Amin launched an attack on Tanzania in October 1978. Tanzanian troops, assisted by armed Ugandan exiles, quickly put Amin’s demoralized army to flight and invaded Uganda.With these troops closing in, he escaped the capital. A coalition government of former exiles, calling itself the Uganda National Liberation Front (UNLF), with a former leading figure in the DP, Yusufu Lule, as president, took office in April 1979.

Because of disagreement over economic strategy and the fear that Lule was promoting the interests of his own Ganda people, he was replaced in June by Godfrey Binaisa, but Binaisa’s term of office was also short-lived.



Supporters of Obote plotted Binaisa’s overthrow, and Obote returned to Uganda in May 1980.Click here to read more about Obote's second regime





Related Pages

History » The Uganda Protectorate

History » The Uganda Protectorate » Growth of a peasant economy

History » The Uganda Protectorate » Political and administrative development

History » The Uganda Protectorate » World War II and its aftermath

History » The Republic of Uganda » Obote’s first presidency

History » The Republic of Uganda » Obote’s second presidency

History » The Republic of Uganda » Museveni in office




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