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Seriously...

Ugandan Asians: The Reckoning

Seriously...

BBC

Documentary, Society & Culture

4.1885 Ratings

🗓️ 11 October 2022

⏱️ 30 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

General Idi Amin seized power in in Uganda in 1971. His brutal dictatorship is synonymous with the deportation of the country's 80,000-strong Asian population fifty years ago this year. As the popular story goes, Asians built the economy and the country. Then a brutish African leader exiled them from their adopted homeland. Some 28,000 arrived in the UK in the summer of 1972. The story of industrious, virtuous Asian families being thrown out for no reason and succeeding against all odds, has been endlessly recycled according to Ugandan-born journalist and broadcaster. But, she argues, though powerful and moving, it is incomplete and simplistic.

Their story in East Africa has much more humble beginnings and goes as far back as the Victorian era. The colonial rulers had set Asians up to be the buffer between them and and the lowly black Africans. At the time native Ugandans had little or no education, little or no knowledge of how to do business, to access loans, trade etc. Asian middlemen ran everything and were seen as the oppressors.

Among the reasons Amin gave for their expulsion were that they were exploiters who made no attempt to integrate with black African Ugandans and that they invested their profits abroad rather than in Uganda. Even though black Ugandans suffered most under Amin - the so-called "Butcher of Uganda" tortured his own people and killed an estimated million of them during his eight-year rule - yet there was still a sense of liberation when the Asians left. These, according to Yasmin, are inescapable truths - truths that Asians wished to forget but black Ugandans never have. Some still maintain that for all the terrible things Amin did, they finally got their country back.

Yasmin delivers a sharp reappraisal of this secret history and delves into the forgotten, concealed past from which the Ugandan Asians do not escape without blame.

Producer: Mohini Patel

Transcript

Click on a timestamp to play from that location

0:00.0

This was an impregnable fortress. The only way you get out was in a wooden box.

0:05.0

The controversial maximum security prison impossible to escape from.

0:09.0

And one of the duties of a political prisoner is the escape.

0:12.0

The IRA inmates who found a way. of a political prisoner is the escape.

0:12.5

The IRA inmates who found a way.

0:14.5

I'm Carlo Gableer and I'll be navigating a path

0:19.5

through the disturbing inside story of the biggest jailbreak in British and Irish history.

0:25.0

The narrative that they want is that this is a big achievement by them.

0:28.5

Escape from the maze, listen first on BBC Sounds.

0:35.0

BBC Sounds. BBC Sounds, music radio podcasts.

0:40.0

Welcome to Seriously from BBC Radio 4.

0:43.6

I'm Vanessa Kasule.

0:45.0

Radio 4 is home to the world's best audio documentaries,

0:48.7

and each week you'll find two hand-picked programs in this feed.

0:53.0

You're about to hear something grippingandan Asians, with British passports landed in the UK.

1:17.0

They'd been exiled from their adopted homeland by President Idi Amin.

1:22.0

I was one of them. Britain was in a state of high

1:25.9

anxiety about immigration. Enoch Powell was a hero to millions. Only 6% of the population supported Prime Minister Ted Heath's decision

1:36.8

to admit these overseas British subjects. We made good in Britain and some even managed to reach the highest echelons of society.

1:47.0

Our feel-good fable of going from adversity to prosperity is frequently told and re-told.

1:55.0

But the fable is incomplete, at times distorted.

2:00.0

It wasn't simply a tale of a baddie, the military dictator Amin and brown-skinned victims.

...

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