“I’m glad to inform the world that the baby was evacuated yesterday when my lawyers were very briefly allowed to come in,” he said.
The popstar-turned-politician, who was the main opposition frontrunner in the presidential elections on the 14th, had earlier this week tweeted he was stuck at the house with no food.
“Day Six under house arrest and we’re still stuck with an 18 months old baby who had paid a visit to her auntie (my wife ) be4 we were raided & besieged. The Dad has been denied access to her. We have run out of food and milk. No one is allowed to leave or come into our compound,” he wrote.
Wine and his wife Barbara remain under house arrest and says High Court judges will visit them on Monday.
“The High Court of Uganda say that they are going to be coming to our place on Monday… but in the meantime, our house is surrounded by hundreds of soldiers, and they even jumped over the fence and have taken control of our compound,” Wine told CNN.
“This detention in my house is illegal, and my lawyers are … saying if there is a case for me and my wife to answer then we should be presented before a competent court,” he added.
“But because Gen. Museveni is aware that he lost this election, flat — that’s why I am being kept under illegal detention, and I am not allowed to meet with my family, I’m not allowed to meet my doctor, and all my lawyers have been [stopped] from meeting me,” he said.
Wine says he has a declaration showing that the final results announced by the electoral commission are false. Videos also exist showing the military taking ballots and stuffing them in boxes and forcing Ugandans to vote for Museveni at gunpoint, he said.
Wine has not shown these videos publicly and CNN was not able to independently verify this information.
“Even if the internet was blacked out and General Museveni ensured that the election was carried out in the dark, and even if the United States and the European [were] blocked from this election, we were able to obtain outstanding and very, very strong evidence,” Wine said.
The President’s spokesman earlier this week referred CNN to the Uganda police when contacted for comment and implied the President knew nothing about Wine’s detention.
A Ugandan police spokesman told CNN, “This matter is before the High Court in Kampala. Kindly wait for the outcome. Thanks.”
Since he seized power following a guerrilla struggle against the government, Uganda has worked closely with successive US administrations.
However the relationship now threatens to turn sour after repeated warnings from senior US politicians about human rights abuses.
“General Museveni does not want any international scrutiny,” Wine told Anderson. “He does not want any human rights claims. When the United States is sponsoring the military, that is an okay thing, but when they call into account Uganda’s human rights, he does not want to hear that.”
Human rights groups and opposition candidates often accuse the security forces of abuse and blurring the line between military and police enforcement.
” All the state institutions are being taken overtaken by General Museveni. The police, the military, the media, every state institution including the courts of law,” said Wine. “No institution is independent… Everything begins and ends with General Museveni. Because it is his orders that work in Uganda, and not the law.”