By Enyichukwu Enemanna
The Ugandan military says it has discovered the training facility of the rebel group, Allied Democratic Forces (ADF) where bomb-making material was also found.
At the facility of the group allied to ISIL (ISIS) located about 60km (37 miles) west of the capital, Kampala, three suspects had been arrested.
The Army spokesman Felix Kulayigye made this revelation on Thursday during a media tour of the village of Kikubajinja in Luwero district.
Authorities blamed the Allied Democratic Forces (ADF), a militia based in the dense forests in the neighbouring Democratic Republic of the Congo, for a series of bombings in Kampala and elsewhere last November, which killed at least nine people.
In one of the worst attacks, a suicide bomber blew himself up at the entrance of a police station in the centre of Kampala. Three minutes later, two other suicide bombers detonated along a road that leads to the parliament.
The training facility was found at the home of a local and a tunnel used for training had been dug in one of the rooms, Kulayigye said.
Security personnel had become suspicious after reports emerged from neighbours that “nobody was allowed to enter, nobody would be seen getting out”, the army spokesman said.
Authorities recovered bomb-making materials including metal, nails and wires as well as bullets and a pistol fitted with a silencer, he said.
In November, the Ugandan army began a joint operation with the Congolese army to root out the ADF, which started as an uprising in Uganda but has been based in the DRC since the late 1990s. It pledged allegiance to the Islamic State in mid-2019.
Kulayigye said the three suspects had already bought a car they planned to use in an attack.
“They were in the process of assembling a bomb which would be taken by that car to explode in a public place,” he said.