Vanguard (Lagos)

Uganda: Idi Amin's son breaks family silence ... says Hollywood missed daddy's other side

Lagos — The Amin family has shunned the media for more than two decades, but now that a new movie, "Last king of Scotland", has returned Idi Amin to the spotlight, Jaffar Amin wants to offer a son's perspective. "Dad is the only person that has ever been accused and sentenced, incarcerated by opinion, without it ever reaching any court house," Jaffar Amin said, calling for a truth and reconciliation committee to investigate that dark period in Uganda's history.

Jaffar Amin is a 40-year-old father of five with broad shoulders, a rich baritone and a confident, animated demeanor. He bears a striking resemblance to his father and punctuates his conversation with impersonations of the late dictator. Though he doesn't deny the atrocities committed during his father's reign, Amin says the film will compound many of the negative images. He also acknowledges that humanizing Idi Amin is a difficult battle.

"Dad's image cannot be changed," Amin sighed. "If I bring an understanding, it will be very little because he's in a compartment and getting him out of there will take a thousand years. But I believe my father would take it on the chin whatever they say about him." Jaffar Amin has broken the family's vow of silence and says he's writing a book to counter his father's reputation as a brutal buffoon and cruel eccentric. Rights groups estimate that up to 500,000 people disappeared under Idi Amin's eight-year regime. His secret police force was notorious for torturing and killing Ugandans they believed to be political opponents. "I don't want to fight what has been written, but I want to show another side.

I want to show a parent, I want to show my father," Amin said. He is the 10th of Idi Amin's 40 official children by seven official wives. "Father had quite an appetite for women," he said simply. "It's very African, actually." At 6 feet 1 inch he is also the shortest of Amin's sons. "My father was 6 foot 4, but most of his male children towered over him. He used to joke that we would make a great basketball team," Amin recalled with a smile. "The Last King of Scotland" premiered in Uganda last week and goes into general release in the country Friday. Forest Whitaker, James McAvoy and director Kevin MacDonald attended the premiere, along with President Yoweri Museveni. None of the Amin family attended, but Jaffar Amin has since watched a DVD of the film, which is a fictionalized version of Idi Amin's reign.

"A lot of the mannerisms were right. But the problem was the walk, Forest didn't get that. My father strides and his hands would go like a paddle because of his wide shoulders. Whitaker is knock-kneed, my father was bowlegged." The Amin family fled Uganda when Idi Amin was ousted by Tanzanian-backed Ugandan rebels in 1979. They lived in exile in Saudi Arabia, where many of the family remain. The family was given a huge monthly allowance that funded an opulent lifestyle; in return Idi Amin was asked to remain silent and out of politics. It was a bargain he kept up to his death in 2003 at age 78. Jaffar Amin returned to Uganda in 1990 and worked for a courier company. He now does voice-overs for advertisements. "I'd ask dad, 'What happened?' He'd look at me and say, 'People fought me, I fought them but I never killed innocent people. God will be the one to judge me.

Tagged: Arts, East Africa, Uganda

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