KAMPALA, Uganda — Police on Thursday detained a key ally of opposition figure Bobi Wine, accusing him of participating in bouts of violence in a remote part of central Uganda during last week's election.
Muwanga Kivumbi, a lawmaker who is a deputy president of Wine's National Unity Platform party, is likely to face criminal charges for his alleged role in violence in his constituency that left seven people dead, said police spokesman Kituuma Rusoke.
Those seven people were killed by unidentified security personnel who fired at Kivumbi's house in Butambala. Kivumbi spoke tearfully at the funerals of those killed, saying they were all victims of violence perpetrated by the armed forces.
Wine, whose real name is Kyagulanyi Ssentamu, says he is in hiding after President Yoweri Museveni, who has held power since 1986, was declared the winner of Thursday's presidential election.
Museveni took 71.6% of the vote while Wine, his closest challenger, took 24.7%, according to official results that Wine rejected as fake.
In a televised speech on Sunday, Museveni accused the opposition of trying to foment violence during voting, saying those killed in Butambala had attacked the police with machetes. He urged religious leaders to reach out to young people who, he said, are likely to be misled into violence.
Rusoke, the police spokesman, said Wine was not a wanted man and that he knew of no attempt to harm him.
''We protected Bobi Wine through the entire election,'' he said. ''Why would he be unsafe after the end of the election? Logically there is no locus.''