Idi Amin was a Ugandan president
best known for his brutal regime and crimes against humanity while in power
from 1971-1979.
Idi Amin was a Ugandan president
born circa 1925 in Kokobo, West Nile Province, Uganda. He rose within the
military from the 1940s through 1970. Amin overthrew the current leader in 1971
and declared himself president, and he remained in power from 1971-1979. During
his tenure, he lived a lavish lifestyle while contributing to the collapse of
Uganda’s economy. He sought to stay in power at all costs, resulting in
extensive human rights violations via mass killings. Overthrown in 1979, he
fled to Libya then Saudi Arabia where he died on August 16, 2003.
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| Gen. Idi Amin Dada |
A member of the small Kakwa ethnic
group of northwestern Uganda, Idi Amin's birth date is unconfirmed, but
estimated to have been in 1925. His mother, an herbalist and diviner, raised him
after his father deserted the family. Amin had little formal education before
joining the King's African Rifles of the British colonial army in 1946 as an
assistant cook.
Military Service
Extremely charismatic and skilled,
Amin quickly rose through the ranks. His stature was rather notable. He stood
six feet, four inches tall and was a Ugandan boxing champion from 1951 to 1960,
as well as a swimmer. He soon became notorious among fellow soldiers for his
overzealous and cruel military interrogations. Eventually he made the highest
rank possible for a Black African serving in the British Army. From 1952 until
1956, he served in the Allied forces' Burma campaign during World War II, and
in the British action against the Mau Mau revolt in Kenya (1952–56).
Before Uganda's independence in
1962, Amin became closely associated with the new nation's prime minister and
president, Milton Obote.
The two men worked to smuggle gold, coffee and ivory out of Congo, but
conflicts soon arose between them, and on January 25, 1971, while Obote was
attending a meeting in Singapore, Amin staged a successful military coup. Amin
became president and chief of the armed forces in 1971, field marshal in 1975
and life president in 1976.
Amin began his rule with popular
actions, including freeing several political prisoners. Simultaneously,
however, he sent out “killer squads” to hunt down and murder Obote's
supporters, predominantly those from the Acholi and Lango ethnic groups,
military personnel and civilians. His victims soon came to include people from
every order and rank, including journalists, lawyers, homosexuals, students and
senior bureaucrats. He expelled all Asians from Uganda in 1972, an action that
led to the breakdown of his country's economy.
Amin became known as the “Butcher of Uganda” for his brutality. It is
believed that some 300,000 people were killed during his presidency. In July
1976 he was personally involved in the hijacking of a French airliner to
Entebbe. In October 1978 Amin ordered an attack on Tanzania. Aided by Ugandan
nationalists, Tanzanian troops eventually overpowered the Ugandan army. As the
Tanzanian-led forces neared Kampala, Uganda's capital, on April 13, 1979, Amin
fled the city. Escaping first to Libya, he finally settled in Saudi Arabia.



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