US Christian Reconstructionist In Ugandan Jail Over Illegal Guns
The Kampala Monitor reported two days ago that police in Kampala are holding an American national who was allegedly found with four illegal guns and 184 rounds of live ammunition. Police Spokesman Assuman Mugenyi told journalists at a press conference at Kibuli Police headquarters yesterday that Dr Peter E Waldron was arrested at about 8pm on Monday.a (Actually, according Waldron's website that should be "Cities of Faith Ministries") Apparently three men were seen near Waldron's home dropping a bag; when a passer-by asked them what they were up to, he had a gun waved at him for his trouble. This rather unfortunate move led to an alarm being raised, and a hostile crowd forming: They pleaded with the mob not to lynch them saying they would show them where more guns were hidden. "The suspects led the police to Waldron's house in Kisugu and on conducting a search, two more SMG rifles were recovered with 94 rounds of ammunition in a wardrobe in his bedroom and copies of The Africa Dispatch newsletter," he said. One of the men who were arrested was a Congolese national. The Monitor also reports that ...Some of the pictures in the magazine show Waldron with diplomats in the High Court during the trial of [Dr Kizza] Besigye. This raised the spectre of terrorism at the high court; however, a Reuters report says that this was incorrect: Police mistakenly identified Waldron on Tuesday as being in a picture taken at the trial of opposition candidate Kizza Besigye and this, they said, was proof of a terrorist threat. This is a bit curious, given that Waldron's appearance is somewhat distinctive (he has a large moustache). Reuters also provides some extra information: An American evangelical and IT consultant, arrested in Uganda with assault rifles this week, planned to set up a political party, police said on Wednesday. The Monitor also refers to an article from the New Republic in 2004 entitled "Evangelicals v. Muslims in Africa: Enemy's Enemy". Here's the relevant section of that piece, by Andrew Rice: The Sunday I attended [Pastor Martin] Ssempa's church, after he finished his sermon, the pastor told his audience that he had a special guest to introduce, a visitor from the United States. All eyes fixed on a stocky white man with a thick moustache who wore a gray safari suit. He introduced himself as Dr. Peter Waldron of Wyoming. Waldron told the congregation that he had once been a military man and that he used to travel around Africa a lot in the 1960s. He was vague about the nature of his work. ("I'm not at liberty to say," he later told me.) But he claimed that, on one occasion, it resulted in some good people getting executed by a firing squad. After that, he contemplated suicide, he told the audience. Then he found Jesus... When Waldron launched into a story about how he'd recently been invited to the real White House in the company of religious rapper MC Hammer, the audience was wowed. A short bio of Waldron on Contact America (currently down - Google cache only) fills in a bit more detail (link added):
Dr. Waldron has worked on several campaigns for candidates seeking to be the President of the United States as well as a great number of U.S. Senate and House races since his first Reagan/Bush campaign of 1979/80. His organization of the faith-based community was, at the time, the beginning of a trend to involve thinking people of faith in the political process. A long list of distinguished clients follows. Waldron's website lays out his theology, which draws explicitly on Rousas Rushdoony and Christian Reconstructionism. Hence libertarian rhetoric is put at the service of a theocratic agenda: Families reigned supreme on earth from Adam until Nimrod (Genesis 10:9) and the gathering of families at Babel (Genesis 11). Until that time, families gave birth to clans and nations but there was no central government. All the people and their families spoke the same language, (Genesis 11:6), and dwelt in their own lands (Genesis 10: 31). God, the Creator, was recognized as the Supreme Ruler and Sovereign Lord over the earth. Waldron is also the author of several Christian books; one of these, Rebuilding the Walls: A Biblical Strategy for Restoring America's Greatness, is available to read. This book, written in 1987, makes the case that "traditional conservatism has led evangelicals astray", and bemoans that ...It was during the conservative administration of Ronald Reagan that trade was normalized with the Soviet dictatorship, that sanctions were imposed on South Africa. Rebuilding the Walls was co-written with George Grant, a high-profile Reconstructionist. Waldron also publishes a newsletter, African Dispatch: The Africa Dispatch is a newsletter that will alert Congress, U.S. and foreign funding agencies , governmental and non-governmental decision-makers, investors, journalists and opinion leaders in the United States and abroad about news concerning hopeful developments in Africa. Oddly, however, the only "Bob Selle" (or "Robert Selle") I could find who is associated with journalism is the editor of World and I, a Unification Church publication (the same Selle also works for Moon's "Family Federation for World Peace and Unification"). Judging from the pdf issue of Africa Dispatch available on-line, the newsletter really exists mainly to puff the Rocky Mountain Technology Group. Waldron is also reportedly a sometime member of the Council for National Policy, although his name does not appear on all lists. He has also been associated with Dennis Peacocke's Anatole Fellowship, a one-time Christian Right lobby-group within the Republican Party. So, just why were all those guns found in Waldron's house? What are his plans for Ugandan politics? How does this fit in with popular Christian support for the increasingly autocratic President Museveni? And just who is Waldron associated with in Congo? (Hat tip: Christianity Today Weblog)
(Cross-posted from my blog)
US Christian Reconstructionist In Ugandan Jail Over Illegal Guns | 7 comments (7 topical, 0 hidden)
US Christian Reconstructionist In Ugandan Jail Over Illegal Guns | 7 comments (7 topical, 0 hidden)
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