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Tuesday 09 June 2026 04:19:28 GMT
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🇺🇬 UGANDA’S 1972 PIVOT: WHY PRESIDENT IDI AMIN EXPELLED ISRAEL FROM UGANDA IN 1972? Here is the history: that speaks with thunder. Read.  After Uganda gained independence in 1962, Israel quickly established close ties with the new government. Israeli engineers, contractors, and military advisers moved into the country, taking on infrastructure projects and gradually embedding themselves as business partners. Over time, their presence in Uganda expanded significantly, becoming a notable part of the nation’s development landscape. After coming to power in 1971, Idi Amin became increasingly wary of Israel’s expanding influence in Uganda. Over the previous decade, Israeli personnel had become deeply involved in the country’s military, political, economic, and social sectors. By 1972, Amin declared that this level of involvement was unacceptable. He severed diplomatic ties and expelled all Israeli personnel, saying their meddling in Uganda’s internal affairs and plundering of its resources smelled like the final act of the old 1903 “Uganda Scheme.” For context, the “Uganda Scheme” was a British proposal to carve out land in East Africa for a potential Jewish homeland. The plan envisioned territory spanning parts of Uganda, Tanzania, and the Somali/Ogaden region, extending all the way to the Red Sea. In interviews later on, Amin described them as
🇺🇬 UGANDA’S 1972 PIVOT: WHY PRESIDENT IDI AMIN EXPELLED ISRAEL FROM UGANDA IN 1972? Here is the history: that speaks with thunder. Read. After Uganda gained independence in 1962, Israel quickly established close ties with the new government. Israeli engineers, contractors, and military advisers moved into the country, taking on infrastructure projects and gradually embedding themselves as business partners. Over time, their presence in Uganda expanded significantly, becoming a notable part of the nation’s development landscape. After coming to power in 1971, Idi Amin became increasingly wary of Israel’s expanding influence in Uganda. Over the previous decade, Israeli personnel had become deeply involved in the country’s military, political, economic, and social sectors. By 1972, Amin declared that this level of involvement was unacceptable. He severed diplomatic ties and expelled all Israeli personnel, saying their meddling in Uganda’s internal affairs and plundering of its resources smelled like the final act of the old 1903 “Uganda Scheme.” For context, the “Uganda Scheme” was a British proposal to carve out land in East Africa for a potential Jewish homeland. The plan envisioned territory spanning parts of Uganda, Tanzania, and the Somali/Ogaden region, extending all the way to the Red Sea. In interviews later on, Amin described them as "subversive," "criminal," and "untrustworthy," claiming their growing presence posed a threat to Uganda's and East Africa's sovereignty. 🇺🇬🇵🇸 #africantiktok #palestinian #ugandanstiktok #eastafrica

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