A spokesperson for the Ugandan military denied Wine’s bodyguard had been targeted.
“UPDF (Ugandan People’s Defence Force) would like to clarify that the late Senteza … was not knocked by a Military Police Vehicle as purported, but rather fell off a speeding car … he tried to jump to (sic) but fell off,” Brig. Gen. Flavia Byekwaso, the spokesperson, wrote on Twitter late on Sunday.
Wine said the incident happened while his team was taking local journalist Ashraf Kasirye to seek medical help, after he had been wounded by police.
Police spokesman Fred Enanga told Reuters that supporters of Wine had gathered on Sunday in Masaka, 125 kilometers (78 miles) southwest of the capital Kampala.
Wine tweeted that he had attended a church service in the town.
Enanga said Wine’s supporters were “violent” but gave no further details on what they were doing.
“Teargas was used to quell the violence. The journalists were regrettably caught up during the process of dispersing the violent group,” Enanga said in a statement online, adding that the circumstances were being investigated.
Enanga told Reuters that Kasirye sustained a serious injury above his left eye “allegedly from a (teargas) canister.”
Wine also accused the military of taking over the election process and said his campaign team have been tear gassed and shot at with live bullets.
While authorities have said the restrictions are necessary to curb the spread of Covid-19, opposition members and their supporters say they are an excuse to curb campaigning before the election.
At the time, witnesses told CNN that police, military and plainclothes gunmen fired high caliber rifles in dense urban areas to quell the protests. Those accounts were backed up by multiple videos shared on social media during the chaos.
Additional reporting by Reuters.