Operation Mafuta Mingi
Ugandan coup d'état attempt / From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Operation Mafuta Mingi (Kiswahili for: "much cooking oil";[3] alternatively spelled "Mafutamingi")[4] was a coup d'état attempt on 18 June 1977 which aimed at killing Ugandan President Idi Amin and overthrowing his government. The operation was organized by the "Uganda Liberation Movement", a group consisting of dissident Uganda Army soldiers and pilots, backed by business owners in Kampala and Entebbe.
Operation Mafuta Mingi | |||||||
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Belligerents | |||||||
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Commanders and leaders | |||||||
Idi Amin (WIA) |
Patrick Kimumwe (POW) Wilson Kimumwe Anthony Bazalaki Sylvester Mutumba (POW) | ||||||
Units involved | |||||||
Uganda Army loyalists State Research Bureau |
Uganda Army dissidents
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Strength | |||||||
Unknown | c. 500 |
The coup plotters were able to amass a substantial force, and planned to eliminate Amin by first bombing his position using combat aircraft, followed by a ground-based attack. On the day of the coup, however, the President was warned and was able to prevent the aerial attack. He then escaped from Entebbe to Kampala, throwing the coup plotters off guard and breaking through a group of dissidents who tried to stop his convoy. Afterwards, the operation unravelled, as coup members were arrested or fled to Kenya. Amin stayed in power until in 1979 when he was deposed as a result of the Uganda–Tanzania War.