Eight managers and editors of a daily newspaper arrested this week have been charged with treason, Ugandan police said.
Police raided the Red Pepper, Uganda’s leading tabloid, on Tuesday and detained journalists, who they accused of publishing a false story the previous day.
The story, citing unnamed sources, alleged Rwanda believes Ugandan President Yoweri Museveni was plotting to oust its leader, Paul Kagame.
Besides treason, the journalists were charged with “offensive communication and publication of information prejudicial to national security,” police spokesman Emilian Kayima told Reuters.
Kayima couldn’t say when the journalists would appear in court.
Rights groups and journalists complain of escalating harassment and intimidation of independent media by security personnel in Uganda.
“We believe this is economic sabotage aimed at occasioning the media house financial loss since all production has been stopped,” the Human Rights Network for Journalists – Uganda (HRNJ-U), a local media rights group, said in a statement.
Local media, including Red Pepper, reported this month on tensions between Uganda and neighbouring Rwanda over a range of economic and security disputes. Uganda’s foreign affairs ministry dismissed the reports as rumours and insisted relations between the two countries were untroubled.