-40%

Idi Amin,The Butcher of Uganda Set of 2 coins & 1 banknote, Album & Certificate

$ 15.93

Availability: 100 in stock
  • Idi Amin,The Butcher of Uganda: 2 coins,1 Banknote,album
  • All returns accepted: Returns Accepted
  • Return shipping will be paid by: Seller
  • Condition: Idi Amin,The Butcher of Uganda, Set of 2 Coins & 1 Banknote, Album & Certificate.Idi Amin was one of the most brutal military dictators to wield power in post-independence Africa. While chief of staff of the Ugandan army, under Dr. Milton Obote's civilian government, he seized power in 1971. He made himself president,with the rank of field marshal, and after eight years of power left Uganda a legacy of bloodthirsty killings and economic mismanagement. Parliament was dissolved; no elections were held; secret police, most of them in plain clothes, exercised absolute power of life and death; and the courts and the press were subjugated to the whims of the executive. Amin, by most accounts, was a deranged, homicidal maniac. He is most famous for the murder of an estimated 500,000. To accomplish this task, Amin deliberately created four rival and overlapping agencies: the Military Police, the Presidential Guard, the Public Safety Unit and the Bureau of State Research.
  • Item must be returned within: 30 Days
  • Certification: seller
  • Country/Region of Manufacture: Uganda
  • Denomination: cents
  • Year: 1966-1977
  • Refund will be given as: Money Back

    Description

    Idi Amin,The Butcher of Uganda, Set of 2 Coins & 1 Banknote, Album & Certificate.
    Serial numbers may differ.
    Idi Amin was one of the most brutal military dictators to wield power in post-independence Africa. While chief of staff of
    the Ugandan army, under Dr. Milton Obote's civilian government, he seized power in 1971. He made himself president,
    with the rank of field marshal, and after eight years of power left Uganda a legacy of bloodthirsty killings and economic
    mismanagement. Parliament was dissolved; no elections were held; secret police, most of them in plain clothes, exercised
    absolute power of life and death; and the courts and the press were subjugated to the whims of the executive.
    Amin, by most accounts, was a deranged, homicidal maniac. He is most famous for the murder of an estimated 500,000.
    To accomplish this task, Amin deliberately created four rival and overlapping agencies: the Military Police, the
    Presidential Guard, the Public Safety Unit and the Bureau of State Research. His henchmen and bodyguards were drawn
    from his own Kakwa tribe. Combined with Libyan security experts, and Amin's own good luck, seven major assassination
    attempts were headed off between 1972 and 1979.
    In the diplomatic arena, Amin raged against all who dared to cross him. He gradually became an international pariah. In
    a bizarre telegram sent to UN secretary-general Waldheim, he wrote, "
    Germany is the right place where, when Hitler was
    the supreme commander, he burnt over six million Jews. This is because Hitler and all German people knew that the
    Israelis are not people who are working in the interest of the people of the world, and that is why they burnt the Israelis
    alive with gas."
    Amin's family life was a succession of casual mistresses, longer -serving concubines, and six wives. He is believed to have
    suffered from advanced syphilis which caused brain damage and insanity. He divorced his first three wives. A fourth, Kay,
    was found butchered into chunks and reassembled. He claimed to have fathered 32 children.
    Amin's downfall came in 1979 when Ugandan troops crossed the frontier into Tanzania, looting and wrecking villages
    along the Kagera River. The Tanzanian president, Julius Nyerere, retaliated by dispatching an armored column of tanks.
    Hundreds of Ugandan exiles joined it as it triumphantly entered Kampala.
    Amin moved to Saudi Arabia, where he was given a villa in J eddah on condition that he remain incommunicado
    indefinitely. The Saudi motive was to silence him because of the harm they believed he was doing to Islam. In the
    subsequent 24 years, he gave no interviews and stayed close to home. Idi Amin Dada, politician and soldier, born around
    1925; died August 16 2003.
    Data:
    Coins issued by the Republic of Uganda - with images crossed tusks and circular sprig:
    KM1 (U) - 5 cents; bronze; 20 mm; 3.21 g; issued 1966-1975
    KM2 (U) - 10 cents; bronze; 24.5 mm; 5.00 g; issued 1966-1975
    Banknote issued 1977
    P-5A (U) - 5 Shillings; 130 x 70mm;
    Obverse: Idi Amin; Reverse: woman picking coffee beans
    Album open measures: 11” x 7.5

    Album folded measures: 5.5” x 7.5”
    ANA Platinum Member,# 3163853
    Over 24,000  positive feedbacks
    All Items Ship Priority Mail.