Dictator of the Month: April 2004:

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Idi Amin Dada

          

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Fact Sheet

Name: Idi Amin Dada
Country (s) Controlled: Uganda
Birthday: date unknown, 1924 or 1925
Died: 16 August, 2003
Dates in Power: 25 Jan, 1971- 11 Apr, 1979
How Leader Came into Power
: Coup
Classification: Military Dictator
Nuclear Capability: no
Major Achievements: Caused major holocaust in Uganda resulting in approximately 300,000 deaths (actual number unknown)

Score Card (click here for the explanations)

Charisma/ Popularity: 2.71
Danger Rating (Foreign policy): 2.36
Oppression Rating (Internal policy): 4
Number of Domestic victims: 4
Longevity
: 2
Economics: 1.43
Notoriety/ Infamy: 4.14
Statesman Factor: 1.79
Extremism: 4.29
Progressiveness: 1.14
Total score (50 max): 27.86

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General Comments:

Idi Amin was infamous in the 1970's for a few things: his ruthlessness as the leader of Ugada, his sartorial Fez style hat, and some of his strange antics (he was rumoured to be a cannibal and to have jumped in a swimming pool in a full dress military uniform.

Biography:

Born in 1924 or 1925 into the Kakwa tribe in Koboko, near Arua in the northwest corner of Uganda, close to the borders with Congo and

Sudan.1946 - Amin joins the King's African Rifles of the British colonial army, serving in the British action against the Mau Mau revolt in Kenya (1952-56). He rises to the rank of lieutenant, becoming one of only two native Ugandans to be commissioned during British rule. In 1951 he becomes the heavyweight boxing champion of Uganda, holding the title until 1960. The authorities become concerned about Amin when he is accused of torture.

1962 - Uganda achieves independence from Britain. Amin is a supporter of Milton Obote, the new nation's prime minister. Obote overlooks the allegations of torture against Amin, promoting him to captain by 1963 and to colonel and deputy commander of the army in 1964.

1966 - Amin backs Obote when a financial scandal and opposition from the kingdom of Buganda causes the prime minister to suspend the constitution. Obote imposes a new republican constitution establishing himself as president and abolishing all the country's kingdoms. Amin is appointed chief of the army and air force, serving in the position until 1970. He begins to build a support base in the army by recruiting from his own Kakwa tribe. His relations with Obote start to sour.

1970 - The relationship deteriorates further following the murder of Amin's sole rival among senior army officers. Obote removes Amin from his command position late in the year and places him in an administrative role.

1971 - Amin discovers that Obote intends to arrest him on charges of misappropriating millions of dollars of military funds. On 25 January, while Obote is out of the country, Amin stages a coup. He is declared president and chief of the armed forces. Almost immediately he initiates mass executions of troops he believes to be loyal to Obote.
Amin becomes field marshal in 1975 and life president in 1976. He expels the country's 50,000 Indians and Pakistanis in 1972, challenges Britain and the United States, breaks relations with Israel, and supports Libya and the Palestinians, becoming personally involved when Palestinians hijack a plane and order it fly to Entebbe in Ugandan.
Domestically, Amin launches a campaign of persecution against rival tribes, murdering between 100,000 and 500,000 (most sources say 300,000). The size of the army is increased. Military tribunals are placed above the system of civil law, soldiers are appointed to top government posts, and civilian cabinet ministers are informed that they will be subject to military discipline. The country's economy begins to collapse.

1978 - In an attempt to divert attention from Uganda's internal problems, Amin launches an attack on Tanzania, a neighbouring country to the south, in October. Tanzanian troops, assisted by armed Ugandan exiles, quickly put Amin's demoralised army to flight and counter-invade.

1979 - The invading Tanzanian forces take Kampala, Uganda's capital, on 11 April. Amin, a Moslem, flees, spending almost a decade in Libya and Iraq before finally settling in Jeddah in Saudi Arabia. The Saudi's provide him with a monthly stipend of about US$1,400. He leads a comfortable life and has four wives.

1989 - He attempts to return to Uganda but is identified at Kinshasa, Zaire (now the Democratic Republic of the Congo), and forced to return to Saudi Arabia.

2001 - Amin remains at large in Saudi Arabia, although it is reported that he wishes to return to Uganda. He continues to be popular in his home province and begins to fund the rebuilding of family properties destroyed by the Tanzanian troops who expelled him in 1979.
The Ugandan government says that Amin is free to return but would have to "answer for his sins" and would be dealt with according to the law. Amin's 43 children are able to travel to and from Uganda, and several of them live there permanently.

2003 - On 20 July Amin is reported to be close to death, lying in a coma in the King Faisal specialist hospital in Jeddah, where he has been receiving treatment for hypertension and general fatigue for three months.

16 August, 2003- Idi Amin dies.

This article is from www.wikipedia.com

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Idi_Amin  

and is subject to the GNU-FDL license for free documentation

List of authors at:

http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Idi_Amin&action=history