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    • in reply to: How Yoweri Museveni Cheated Elections #1429

      While he says there is peace in the country and while many seem to enjoy that pseudo peace, the dictator’s heart has not known peace in the many recent years. He is constantly at war. But the enemies he is at war with are of a nature that makes the war so complicated and it may kill him because no gun can win this war for the dictator. He is fighting against these three.
      1. His own conscience. This man rode high on the support and courageous sacrifice of Ugandans who put their lives on the line and fought in luweero- many paid the ultimate price because they thought he would make Uganda a better place. See where we are now!!! The blood of all those people who died cry out to God and God has stirred the dictator’s own conscience against him. It is torturing him and making him run crazy.
      2. The presence of a one quiet, unarmed colonel Besigye who is resolutely lethal to the dictatorship is also making him crazy. He has incarcerated him, beaten him, gagged him, tear gassed him, abused him, taken him from his family and yet the man inside Kizza Besigye is far from being disarmed of the resolve to do what is right. Whenever he thinks of Besigye the dictator feels that overwhelming inner fatigue and defeat.
      3. He is gripped by great fear. Fear, not of war but fear of the unknown and uncertainty. He does not know anymore what tomorrow brings for him. Will he end like Gadaffi? Will Ugandans seek retribution for all the wrong? Will he be around to witness Natasha’ kids graduate from anywhere in Uganda? And so on….
      3. He is fighting also with the hard reality that Uganda’s love for him has waned and waned and died. The man Uganda saw as a partner against injustice has since gone loose canon on every one and become a loathed pariah and agent of injustice. This course has reached a point of no return.
      This war is different from the physical one the dictator has won with the AK47. This is war that he has no expertise to win. One that will surely kill him. Change is coming

      in reply to: How Yoweri Museveni Cheated Elections #1428

      ————-in 90s we had mukyaka mukyaka groups and then government came up with LDU a well trained group that was to tighten security at village levels but it worked for some time and all these people were drooped with their skills.
      ————they then trained SPC for a long time and used them for a short time then drooped them. Remember they are now jobless but with skills.
      ————-in 2010 another group was trained to work in the 2011 elections and they were also chased after elections. They went back to their villages with their skills.
      ———–in 2015 another group of crime preventers was trained for a long time and used for only weeks.
      ———–u train a man how to operate a gun and give him the spirit of military then u employ him for one week and chase him. What do u expect him to do at his village.
      ———-a university gives u knowledge of human body in medicine and it doesn’t employ u but it sends u to ur village to apply the knowledge by treating people in hospitals.
      What do u expect LDU, SPC, Crime preventer and other groups to do after giving them skills and not employing them?.

      in reply to: How Yoweri Museveni Cheated Elections #1427

      Yoweri Museveni
      1. He is Ugandan president and commander-in-Chief of armed forces. He and 42 others, with 27 guns launched an armed rebellion against the government of former President Obote in 1981. He captured power in 1986 and has been president since then.

      Salim Saleh
      2.He is a special presidential advisor on defense affairs. In 1976, at the age of 16, he joined his brother Yoweri Museveni in exile in Tanzania and participated in the 1979 Kagera war that brought an end Amin regime. During the war, he fought under FRONASA, commanded by his brother Yoweri Museveni. He joined NRA in late 1981, months after NRA had attacked Kabamba. During the bush war, Gen. Saleh commanded the mobile brigade that fought many and fierce battles against government troops. He was army commander for a year, from 1988-89 before he was sacked and replaced by Mugisha Muntu.

      Elly Tumwine
      3.He shot the first bullet on February 6, 1981 during the foiled attack on Kabamba barracks that marked the beginning of the five-year NRA guerilla war in Luwero. Gen. Tumwine is a member of parliament representing UPDF. He was the first army commander after NRA captured power in 1986. He did cadet in Munduli in 1979.

      Katumba Wamala
      4. Gen Wamala is the Chief of Defence Forces, the highest position in the Ugandan military. Prior to his current appointment, Gen. Katumba was Commander Land Forces. He has previously worked as Inspector General of Police. He joined NRA in 1986 after serving in UNLA that was pushed out of power in the same year.

      Kale Kayihura
      5.He is the police boss and has served in that capacity since 2005. Before then, he had served in DR Congo. He joined NRA in 1982. He has been criticized by human rights activists for cracking down on demonstrations by the opposition.

      Jeje Odong
      6. He is State Minister for defense. He was arrested in February 1981 after the NRA attack on Kabamba for collaborating with the rebels. He was taken to Luzira Prisons for five years. He joined the army in 1979.

      Moses Ali
      7. He is a lawyer and politician. Gen. Ali is the Third deputy prime minister and East Moyo Member of Parliament. The flamboyant general served Minister of finance under Amin regime.

      Lieutenant Generals
      Ivan Koreta-He is the former deputy Chief of Defense Forces and Ambassador-designate.
      Charles Angina-He replaced Koreta and is the current Deputy Chief of Defense Forces.
      Andrew Guti-He is the commandant of Senior command and Staff College, Kimaka
      Robert Rusoke-He is Uganda’s ambassador in South Sudan
      Jim Owoyesigire-The former boss of Uganda Air Force was sacked by the President after four Ugandan choppers destined for Somalia crashed, leaving seven soldiers dead. He is not deployed.
      Major Generals
      David Muhoozi-The commander of Land Forces, joined the army in 1985.
      Fred Mugisha- The former commander of African Union troops in Somalia was appointed commander of Anti-Terrorism Center in 2013, which has never taken off.
      Nathan Mugisha-He is Ugandan deputy ambassador in Somalia. In 2010, he commanded African Union troops in Somalia.
      Julius Oketta- He is the director of National Emergency and Coordination Operations in the Office of the Prime Minister.
      Francis Okello- He was the second commander of AMISOM from 3 March 2008 to the end of his tour of duty in 2009. He commandant of UPDF Military Rapid Deployment
      Wilson Mbasu Mbadi- The former presidential bodyguard has rapidly risen through ranks and is Joint Chief of Staff.
      Pecos Kutesa- The NRA bush hero, is the UPDF Chief of doctrine.
      Joram Mugume-The former deputy army commander works under Ministry of defense Land department.
      Matayo Kyaligonza – He is Ugandan ambassador in Burundi and the NRM vice Chancellor, western region.
      Sam Turyagyenda- He is the commander of Air Force
      Geoffrey Muheesi-Deputy Amisom Force Commander.
      Brigadiers
      1. Charles Bakahumura- Chief of Military Intelligence
      2. James Mugira-Managing Director Luwero Industries.
      3. John Mugume-Chief of UPDF shop
      4. Dick Olum-just returned from Somalia
      5. Michael Ondoga-on trial in UPDF court martial
      6. Joseph Musanyufu-Chief of Personnel and Administration
      7. Francis Chemonges-Commandant Kalama Armored Warfare Training School(KAWTS)
      8. Joseph Ssemwanga- He is the commander of armored brigade in Masaka. He joined the army in 1995.
      9. Deus Sande- Chief Instructor Artillery
      10. Geofrey Katsigazi-under Artillery division
      11. George Igumba
      12. Tom Tumuhairwe-Service Brigade
      13. Geoffrey Taban- Defence attaché in Congo
      14. Joram Kakari-Chief of Pensions
      15. Sam Kavuma-Commander Uganda Contingent in Somalia
      16. Peter Elwelu-Second division commander
      17. Paul Lokech-Defence Attaché in Russia
      18. Innocent Oula-UPDF representative in parliament
      19. Lucky Kidega-New commander of Regional Task Force hunting LRA
      20. Nakibus Lakara-Third Division Commander
      21. Henry Tumukunde-Not deployed
      22. Muhoozi Kainerugaba-Commander
      Special Forces
      23. Chris Kazoora-Commander Reserve Force, Central region
      24. Stephen Kashaka- Defence attaché in South Africa
      25. William Oketcho-Reserve Force
      26. Elly Kayanja-Coordinator NAADS
      27. Eric Mukasa-Reserve Force
      28. Dennis Asiimwe-Commandant University Military Science and Technology, Lugazi
      29. Stephen Rwabantu-under Reserve Force
      30. Phenehas Katirima-Member of parliament and Chief Education and Sports
      31. Moses Diiba Sentongo-Chief of Civil-Military relations
      32. Joseph Oracha
      33. Jim Willis Byaruhanga-Chief of Training
      34. Ramadhan Kyamulesire- Chief of legal services
      35. John Lorot-Fifth Division Commander
      36. Dr. Emmanuel Musinguzi-
      37. Dr. Ambrose Musinguzi-Director of Medical Services
      38. Yowasi Kiiza- Retired
      39. Leopold Kyanda-Chief of Staff Land Forces
      40. Silver Kayemba-Military Attaché in Washington
      41. Ronnie Balya- Director General, Internal Security Organisation
      42. Kayanja Muhanga-Fourth Division commander
      43. Sabiiti Mutebile-Chief of Construction
      44. Jacob Musajjawaza-Chief of Production
      45. Gowa Kasiita
      46. Mathew Gureme-Chief of Staff of Rapid Deployment
      47. John Mateeka-Chairman First division Court
      48. Moses Rwakitarate-Not deployed
      49. Proscovia Nalweyiso-senior Presidential advisor on defence and security
      50. James Okidingi-Commander Artillery division
      51. Julius Chihanda-Under Foreign Affairs
      52. Garvas Mugyenyi-Air defence boss
      53. Fred Tolit-Ugandan Defence Envoy at African Union
      54. Brig. George Etyang-Military Attaché in India
      55. Augustine Kyazze. Under Logistics
      56. Charles Otema Owany-Chief of Logistics

      ELECTORAL COMMISSION
      Eng. Dr. Badru M. Kiggundu
      Commissioner Biography:
      Bachelor’s degree in Engineering (BSc 1969), MSc 1971 Carnegie-Mellon University USA and PHD 1981 University of New Mexico USA. Eng. Dr. Kiggundu is a Geotechnical/Bituminous materials specialist. His research in Geotechnical and Bituminous materials has contributed a lot in the study of the same. He was Associate Professor, head of Department, Civil Engineering and later Dean of Faculty of Technology at Makerere University. He has held chairmanship of several conferences on Earthquake disaster preparedness and Engineering in Uganda.
      He has been a consultant on various road works rehabilitation projects and as Director Technology Consult Ltd. In Uganda, He has authored an excess of 50 publications. He is entrusted with the stewardship of the Electoral Commission as Chairman since November 18th 2002. He WAS in charge of Near East districts. He was brutal in the rigging of the elections and before the elections. At some point he threatened to arrest and detain one of the presidential candidates! He was dangerously brutal.
      JOSEPH N. BIRIBONWA
      Commissioner Biography:
      Mr. Joseph N. Biribonwa holds a Bachelors of Commerce with Hons. Degree from the University of Nairobi. He has over 35 years of experience in Commercial Management of Public Enterprises (Export and Import Corporation, State Trading Corporation, Uganda Hardwares Ltd, Uganda Pharmaceuticals Ltd, Uganda Electricity Board and Electoral Commission); he was a Commissioner, Electoral Commission from 2002 to November 2009. He has
      TOM. W. BURUKU
      Commissioner Biography:
      Mr.Tom Buruku has over 35 years’ experience in management and diplomatic service. He holds an Honours degree in Law from the University of Dar es salam. He worked in various positions in British American Tobacco Company(BAT Uganda Ltd)(1968-1980). 1981-1990 He served as secretary general, Uganda Red Cross. 1985-1990 He was appointed Director/Africa Department, International Federation of Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies in Geneva, Switzerland. Between 1991-1997. A cadre of the movement masquarading as an arbitor in elections. He too was brutal during and after the rigging.
      1. JENNY B. OKELLO
      Commissioner Biography:
      Dr Jenny B. Okello holds a BA of Arts degree in French and English from Makerere University, with a PHD (Linguistics) from Indiana university, Bloomington Indiana, USA. She lectured at the university of Ghana, Legon university of Ife(later renamed Obafemi Awolowo University) Nigeria and Makerere University in Uganda. She later worked for African Textile Mills as Personnel/Administration Manager and Government Central Purchasing Corporation as Personnel/Training manager. Commissioner Okello is in Charge of Central South region. She swore to do everything to help the ruling team extend their stay in power at the expense of the will of the majority of the people of Uganda. She too was brutally against anybody else winning the presidential elections.
      STEPHEN D. ONGARIA
      Commissioner Biography:
      Holds a Higher Diploma in Textile Technology from the Institute of Textile Technology, Manchester, U.K He was a General Manager in various larger public Parastatal Textile Industries for 16 years â notably; Uganda Rayon Textiles Manufacturers Ltd. Uganda Spinning Mill Ltd. Lira, Pamba (Mulco) Textiles Ltd. Jinja, Uganda Bags and Hessian Mill Ltd. Tororo under the umbrella of Uganda Development Corporation. He was also a Member of Parliament for about 20 years, during which among other things, he represented the Parliament of Uganda in various regional and international fora. He, for instance, represented the Parliament of Uganda at the EU/ACP Parliament, in Brussels for a number of years. He was also one of the three MPs from the Parliament of Uganda who, together with 3 counterparts from Kenya and 3 from Tanzania, signed the East African Community Protocol establishing the Community in Dar-es-Salaam in 1998, on behalf of their respective countries. While in Parliament, he also served on a number of sessional and select committees. He was a delegate to the Constituent Assembly that debated and promulgated the 1995 Constitution of the Republic of Uganda. He was also the Chairman, Board of Directors of the National Transport Licensing Board. He is currently a Member of the Board of Directors, Kinyara Sugar Works Ltd. Commissioner Ongaria is in Charge of the North Region
      MUGABI JUSTINE AHABWE (MRS)
      Commissioner Biography:
      Mrs Mugabi Justine Ahabwe holds a Bachelor of Education Degree in English Language and Literature from Makerere University, and a Diploma in Secondary Education from National Teachers’ College Kabale.
      She has 18 years of experience in teaching where she has served in positions of Careers teacher, Director of Studies among others. She is an ardent Girl Guide and was once a Girl Guides District Commissioner for Rukungiri District. SHE DID SO MUCH TO ENSURE THE BANGLING OF THE ELECTION.
      Commissioner Justine is in charge of the Mid West Region.

      ANNEX 1b

      The following people committed aided most in election malpractices and rigging. We strongly suggest they should be banned from entering the territory of the EU.
      SNO NAMES DISTRICT/LOCATION
      1. OPIRA SYLVESTER – ABIM
      2. AKELLO AGNES EBONG – ADJUMANI
      3. OKWIR CHARLES RAY – AGAGO
      4. OBEDMOTH OFUNGI – ALEBTONG
      5. OGWANG ADYERO RICHARD – AMOLATAR
      6. BEWAYO NSUBUGA STEPHEN – AMUDAT
      7. OSOTTO OPIO JOSEPH – AMURIA
      8. KIDEGA NABINSON JAMES – AMURU
      9. JACK ODUR – APAC
      10. PETER DEBELE – ARUA
      11. MACHO GEOFFREY – BUDAKA
      12. SHILAKU JAMES – BUDUDA
      13. KIKOMEKO MWANAMOIZA – BUGIRI
      14. RWAKIFARI PETER – BUHWEJU
      15. SSENYONJO KYEYUNE – BUIKWE
      16. MULUGA IMURAN – BUKEDEA
      17. KITYO MUKASA – BUKOMANSIMBI
      18. PETER KEN LOCAP – BUKWO
      19. WABUDI EDWARD – BULAMBULI
      20. BISOBORWA PETER – BULIISA
      21. PIUS MUJUZI – BUNDIBUGYO
      22. KAWOYA ISAAC – BUSHENYI
      23. KATO MATANDA HUSSIEN – BUSIA
      24. AGABA ABBAS – BUTALEJA
      25. KAKOOZA YAHAYA – BUTAMBALA
      26. BOMEERA N. FABIAN – BUVUMA
      27. MUNULO NASSER – BUYENDE
      28. SUSAN AKANYE – DOKOLO
      29. LUBEGA ABUBAKER KADDUNABI – GOMBA
      30. LAMWAKA CATHERINE – GULU
      31. NYAKAHUMA PATRICK – HOIMA
      32. AKATUHEBWA ELIASTO – IBANDA
      33. HAJJI WALUGEMBE RAMATHAN – IGANGA
      34. MUHANGI HERBERT – ISINGIRO
      35. RICHARD GULUME BALYAINO – JINJA
      36. SIMON LOLIM – KABONG
      37. DARIUS NANDINDA – KABALE
      38. ASIIMWE STEPHEN – KABAROLE
      39. JAMES EBIL – KABERAMAIDO
      40. TUKAIKIRIZA CALEB – KALANGALA
      41. KEMERWA ALINE MARY K. – KALIRO
      42. SENGOBA SEKANDI SHAFIQ – KALUNGU
      43. AISHA KABANDA – KAMPALA
      44. HERMAN SENTONGO – KAMULI
      45. ELIJAH BIRYABAREMA – KAMWENGE
      46. MUGABI MARTIN – KANUNGU
      47. JANE FRANCES KUKA – KAPCHORWA
      48. MAJ. MWESIGYE K. JAMES (RTD) – KASESE
      49. OCAILAP FILBERT – KATAKWI
      50. BIRUNGI ROSE – KAYUNGA
      51. ARAALI KISEMBO – KIBAALE
      52. TUMWESIGYE JOSEPHAT – KIBOGA
      53. WAZIKONYA M. GIMEI – KIBUKU
      54. KAMWINE CATHERINE – KIRUHURA
      55. MAJ. MATOVU DAVID (RTD) – KIRYANDONGO
      56. MUHINDO PULKERIA MWINE – KISORO
      57. OKOT LAPORO (CAPT) – KITGUM
      58. AYUME ELIZABETH – KOBOKO
      59. NAHORI OYAA – KOLE
      60. PETER LOGILO – KOTIDO
      61. ALICE MUWANGUZI – KUMI
      62. OKWAKOL JOSEPH – KWEEN
      63. KASHAIJA ROBERT – KYANKWANZI
      64. NYAKWERA BAGUMA – KYEGEGWA
      65. MUGISHA PETER – KYENJOJO
      66. AYO MOLLY OBUA – LAMWO
      67. GEORGE ODONG – LIRA
      68. BANGU FRED A – LUUKA
      69. MAKUMBI HENRY KAMYA – LUWERO
      70. KALEMBA CHRISTOPHER – LWENGO
      71. TUGURAGARA MATOJO SULAIMAN SALONGO – LYANTONDE
      72. KIGAYI MOSES WAMOTO – MANAFA
      73. WILLIAM KOMAKECH MARACHA
      74. LENOS NGOMPEK – MASAKA
      75. CAPT. MARTHA ASIIMWE – MASINDI
      76. MBEIZA MARGARET – MAYUGE
      77. SHABAN KACIMETE – MBALE
      78. KABUYE NICKSON – MBARARA
      79. GUMA NUWAGABA – MITOOMA
      80. LT. WALUSIMBI JOLLY JOE (RTD) – MITYANA
      81. SAM ABURA PIRIRI – MOROTO
      82. ABINGWA JOHN – MOYO
      83. BWEBALE APOLLO – MPIGI
      84. BEYUNGA FLORENCE TUMUHAIRWE – MUBENDE
      85. KIGOZI KAWESA – MUKONO
      86. DAVID MODO – NAKAPIRIPIT
      87. JUUKO KASIITA APPOLLO – NAKASEKE
      88. HAJJI SWAIBU LUBEGA WAGWA – NAKASONGOLA
      89. MPIMBAZA HASHAKA – NAMAYINGO
      90. DAVID SSEMPA – NAMUTUMBA
      91. NAHAMAN OJWE – NAPAK
      92. MARTIN OROCHI – NEBBI
      93. ARIONG JOHN HENRY – NGORA
      94. WILSON ISINGOMA – NTOROKO
      95. BAMWINE FRED – NTUNGAMO
      96. AKELLO BEATRICE AKORI – NWOYA
      97. ABAK ROBERT – OTUKE
      98. AKULLO LILIAN – OYAM
      99. LANGOJUL JUSTINE – PADER
      100. WATANYERE JOHN NAMBENDA – PALLISA
      101. MUBIRU CHARLES – RAKAI
      102. KULE MURANGA – RUBIRIZI
      103. NAKAMYA HARRIET – RUKUNGIRI
      104. SEKABITO JOSEPH – SEMBABULE
      105. EDWARD ONYA AKONAPESA – SERERE
      106. TURYAMUBOONA WILLY – SHEEMA
      107. MAGOMU MUBARAK – SIRONKO
      108. ISAAC LULABA – SOROTI
      109. KENNEDY OTITI – TORORO
      110. IAN KYEYUNE – WAKISO
      111. ABIRIGA IBRAHIM (MAJ) – YUMBE
      112. ACHILLA JOHN REX – ZOMBO
      DEPUTY RESIDENT DISTRICT COMMISSIONERS
      SNO NAME DISTRICT
      1. OMUUT JOHN R.O – AMURIA
      2. ONORIA AMBROSE APAC
      3. TOKO SHUAIB – ARUA
      4. ELAIJAH MADOI – BUGIRI
      5. KATEBA ERIAS NUWAGABA – BUNDIBUGYO
      6. TABARO RICHARD – BUSHENYI
      7. BABIRYE MILLY DOKA – BUSIA
      8. DUMBA MOSES – BUIKWE
      9. ANDREW AWANYI – GULU
      10. AMBROSE MWESIGYE – HOIMA
      11. ROSE BYABASAIJA – IBANDA
      12. MUGWERI MOSES – IGANGA
      13. ERIC SAKWA – JINJA
      14. TURYATUNGA DAMIANO – ISINGIRO
      15. MOSES NIWAGABA – KABALE
      16. KAMUGISHA VINCENT – KABAROLE
      17. KOMAKECH SALIM – KABERAMAIDO
      18. BWABYE RICHARD – KALUNGU
      19. SSENKUNGU TEOPISTA – KALANGALA
      20. JACKIE KEMIGISHA KIIZA – KAMPALA(NAKAWA)
      21. DEBORAH MBABAZI – KAMPALA (RUBAGA)
      22. NABUKENYA DEBORAH MERCY K. – KAMPALA (KAWEMPE)
      23. KITAMBULA HENRY – KAMPALA (MAKINDYE)
      24. KAJIK ALLAN – KAMPALA (CENTRAL)
      25. MITALA EMMY – KAMULI
      26. EMMY KATERA TURYABAGYENYI – KAMWENGE
      27. NDYANA RICHARDS – KANUNGU
      28. MUTEMO ROBERT – KAPCHORWA
      29. MUHINDO AMINADAB – KASESE
      30. ELAKAS WALTER – KATAKWI
      31. YAHAYA WERE – KAYUNGA
      32. EMMY NGABIRANO – KIBAALE
      33. NYAKATEMBA RAUBEN – KIRUHURA
      34. MUCUNGUZI GEOFFREY – KISORO
      35. RACHEAL ADYANGO – KUMI
      36. MUGANGA DAN – KYANKWANZI
      37. MWEBESA MOSES – KYENJOJO
      38. LUTUKUMOI MWAKA – LIRA
      39. NAMUGANZA PERCIS – LUWERO
      40. CAROLYNE NANSHEMEZA KASHAIJA – LYANTONDE
      41. MAWUMBE K. BETTY KAKAI – MANAFA
      42. SSEKASAMBA JOSEPH – MASAKA
      43. BAHEBWA LONGINO – MASINDI
      44. HAJJI SEBYALA BADRU – MAYUGE
      45. NAMAKANDA PAMELA WATUWA – MBALE
      46. KALIFANI SSEWANTE – MBARARA
      47. AHARIKUNDIRA AFRICANO – MITOOMA
      48. LUNKUSE ESTER LUTAYA – MITYANA
      49. HELLEN PULKOL – MOROTO
      50. COLLINS OBEDI – MOYO
      51. LILIAN NAKAWESA– MPIGI
      52. EVELYN KIIZA TINKAMALIRWE – MUBENDE
      53. MUGABE YUNUSU – MUKONO
      54. ANGELLA FRED – NAKAPIRIPIRIT
      55. NAYEBARE KYAMUZIGYITA FRED – NAKASEKE
      56. AGILONG MODESTA – NEBBI
      57. MBABAZI JUSTINE – NTUNGAMO
      58. BATEGANA BAKALE SADIQ – PALLISA
      59. MBETEGYEREIZE GODFREY – RAKAI
      60. DENIS NZEIRWE – RUKUNGIRI
      61. BAGUMA HENRY – SEMBABULE
      62. OMARA WILLIAM – SIRONKO
      63. EKOOMU STEPHEN – SOROTI
      64. MUKOSE JAMES – TORORO
      65. KIRABIRA NALONGO ROSEMARY – WAKISO (ENTEBBE)
      66. NAMAGOGA HAJIRA – WAKISO (KASANGANTI)
      RE- DEPLOYED TO HEADQUARTER AND OTHER DEPARTMENTS
      SNO NAMES NEW DEPLOYMENT
      1. KABONESA SEKITOLEKO K.JULIET – FOREIGN SERVICE
      2. EMILIA KINYERA – OFFICE OF THE PRESIDENT (DEPUTY PRESIDENTIAL ADVISOR ON RETAINER)
      3. JEANNE KARIBA – OFFICE OF THE PRESIDENT (ISO)
      4. KYOMUKAMA GEOFFREY – OFFICE OF THE PRESIDENT (ISO)
      5. BURIKU PATRICK – OFFICE OF THE PRESIDENT (ISO)
      6. ARWATA JOSEPH – OFFICE OF THE PRESIDENT (DEPUTY PRESIDENTIAL ADVISOR ON RETAINER)
      7. ALIBINA OPIYO OMODING – OFFICE OF THE PRESIDENT (PRESIDENTIAL ADVISOR ON RETAINER)
      8. TIGURIHWAYO PROTAZIO BASHAIJA – OFFICE OF THE PRESIDENT (DEPUTY PRESIDENTIAL ADVISOR ON RELIGIOUS AFFAIRS)
      9. JANE SENOGA – SPECIAL PRESIDENTIAL ASSISTANT FOR POLITICAL AFFARIS

      in reply to: The problem of Uganda political class #1423

      Justice dismissed this application with costs, stating that the constitution protects the sitting president from being subjected to any proceeding before any court of law, except during the time when he/she is running for the office, which case can only be heard by the Supreme Court.

      Justice Musota ruled that if the applicants were not contented with Museveni’s age, they should have challenged it earlier during the campaigning period which they didn’t.

      “This is a case with no merit which is aimed at wasting court’s time and abusing court’s process,” he said.

      The judge added that interim orders are issued only when there is a main suit pending but in this matter once it is issued it will appear like a final ruling since there is no pending suit.

       

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      “Being a lay person shouldn’t be a basis to abuse court process, I summarily dismiss the matter with costs,” ruled Musota.

      On receiving the ruling, President Museveni’s lawyer Kiryowa Kiwanuka applauded Justice Musota for being just and thereby warned all people against abusing court processes in disguise of being lay people

      Bigirwa and Kizza who represented themselves in court said that after being let down by court now they are going to mobilize Ugandans to defend their constitution.

      “We have enough evidence to prove that Museveni is above 75 years of age and since constitution provides us with an option of defending our rights we shall utilize it

      in reply to: The problem of Uganda political class #1421

      You all know that my father Dusman Okee who was in many ways also my mother died on 3rd January 2016.

      His 74th birthday celebrations were planned for 5th January 2016. By the time he died he had remarried more than once. Hence the title of this tribute. So now my current mother is my father’s surviving widow.

      She’s from Serere. She is the matriarch at our family home in Bukaya, Njeru, Buikwe. I pay tribute to her today because she is the one holding fort at home and makes our family house a home. She gives warmth to the cold steel, brick and mortar of the house.

      These days those who come to see me get surprised that I have an English-Ateso dictionary on my living room table. Though my current mother is fluent in English she is not able to speak Luo fluently.

      So I want to meet her half way by learning some Ateso. After all in 2011 during my presidential campaigns the Itesot credited me for being like a burglar proof for my people in terms of defending human rights, land rights and peace. They named me Ekirigi – or something like that. Loosely translated as a strong impenetrable door.

      But I am digressing. Let’s me start from the beginning. My biological mother only looked after me for eight months. Naturally that is on top of the nine months she nurtured me in her young seventeen year old womb. When I was about eight months, my father who was then in the army, returned home from work and found me all alone in the house. I must have cried, slept, cried again and slept again, soiled myself over and over. He looked around and my mother was nowhere to be seen.

      My mother, Christina Bitwababo, had decided to leave. If she had carried me along perhaps I would have grown up in her home village of Ngarama in Bukanga, Isingiro. Maybe my story would have been very different from what it has been so far. Maybe I would have been a Kadogo in the NRA etc etc. Sometimes I think about all these things.

      So my father cleaned up his first born son and considered his options. Given how close my father and I were, we have discussed these matters in detail including my early years and why my mother left. Both those and more will be detailed in my book which will likely come out next year if and when, God willing, I clock the half century mark next year!

      The next day, my father put me in his Volkswagen Beetle and we started the journey to Gulu. One day as we talked about my early years he confessed to me that he stopped the car at Karuma Falls bridge and considered letting the torrential waters of the River Nile end what in his view was a life likely to end in a few months. In those days infant mortality rate was very high.

      But he reconsidered and we continued the journey to Lacor in Gulu where my grandmother, Yunia (an anglicized Luo version of Eunice) Lakop, a widow by then lived. The year was 1967. I used to joke with my father that if it was God’s will that I live the waterfall would have lifted me instead of drowning me and depositing me safely like the Nile waters guided Moses to safety. The only difference is that unlike Moses I would not be in a basket and would be entirely at the mercy of the elements.

      So from the cutting of my umbilical cord to the time my mother and I parted was about eight months. As I grew up in the care of my grandmother assisted by my uncle’s wife, Regina, the mother of Rt. Hon. Dan Kidega, I obviously wondered who my real mother was. I concluded that it was my grandmother. After all she suckled me.

      I have made some inquiries as to whether an old woman’s breasts can produce milk and the answer astounded me. I used to think I was probably contented with swallowing my own baby saliva while purporting to be suckling but I have since been told that the mammary glands of a woman of advanced age can actually be stimulated to produce milk. My father and I used to joke that we were like brothers because we suckled the same breasts!

      So today I pay tribute to my grandmother who in many ways was my mother. I also pay tribute to Regina Oballim Agol who used to take me to her house to feed me with porridge. The milk from my grandmother’s breasts needed to be supplemented.

      When I came of school going age, I was taken to the village of Bwobo some seven miles west from Gulu. There I lived with my aunt Christine Amoo Lalela Obwona. She was a tough one, that aunt of mine. N

      o nonsense in every sense. But extremely loving. She is the one woman who is responsible for looking after me in my early formative years. She taught me hard work, discipline and the value of education. Together with my grandmother, they always told me, “…education is your mother, education is your father”.

      That became my mantra. I excelled so much in my primary school that the teachers used to pick me from my P3 class and take me to the P5 class to solve mathematical problems to the great embarrassment of my seniors.

      I wasn’t even tall enough to reach the blackboard well so I would stand on a stool. Eventually the school saw that I was spending too much time in the P5 class and decided that I may as well join the P5 class for real. So that is how I leapfrogged to P5 from P3.

      My aunt, my mother, believed in a good fight. One day a bully had clobbered me and I came home crying. She was not sympathetic at all. “Aren’t you a man?”, she exhorted me, “You have to fight back”. I gave the matter serious consideration and came up with a radical solution. In fact the solution was rather too radical. It almost got me expelled from the school. Suffice to say that the bullying stopped. I have occasionally told that story. More will be in the book.

      So today I pay tribute to my aunt, my mother. She still lives in Bwobo, Gulu. A widow of great moral courage, character and intelligence.

      Jinja

      As I grew older my father felt that I should now start spending time in Jinja where he was now working having left the army (saying he left the army is actually an understatement because the circumstances which I’ll narrate in the book are more complex). In Jinja, actually Bukaya, there was another mother. Yudaya Namiiro, daughter of Hajji Saad Kizito of Ruti, Mbarara. I don’t call her step mother because she was a real mother to me.

      As I grew up my confusion about my maternal origins also mounted. In Gulu the local kids whispered that my mother was dead. Others said I was just some abandoned Munyankole kid my father picked up from a rubbish pit in Mbarara! All these confusing thoughts were boiling inside me like a volcano.

      I wondered what to believe. So when I reached Jinja, I thought finally I had been reunited with my biological mother. But soon I knew that she was not the one. I could also overhear her telling her relatives who I really was. The relatives treated me adoringly. “He’s a beautiful child”, they would tell my mother.

      From this I realized that my biological mother was still somewhere out there. Still, this mother of mine was a real mother in every respect. She spoke Luo fluently, of course with the accent of her mother tongue. One day she came to visit in Gulu and saw my condition in the village. It was normal for the village kids to have lice in their hair.

      She found it abhorrent and told my father that I should immediately be placed under her care. She started the care immediately by giving my head a clean shave leaving the lice with no sanctuary. Then we boarded the train to Jinja and then the Victoria Nile Bus Town Service to Njeru.

      She was a bundle of energy. She demanded that we worked hard. No loafing in bed in the morning. Many as we were in our double decker beds, she ensured that beds were made properly and bed wetters reprimanded and punished. We nicknamed her “Inspector”. We thought she was behaving like the Marine Corps Drill Sergeants in the movie “Full Metal Jacket”, but now we credit her for making us who we are.

      She seemed to have eyes in the back of her head. Nothing escaped her eagle eyed vigilance. She taught us housework. Indeed she had no choice. We the older children were all boys. We mopped the floor, washed dishes, washed clothes and ensured the food did not get burnt. At an early age we learnt how to make porridge.

      But she was also a community person. She would frequently send food to others in the neighborhood. She would gather young people and they would dance traditional dances. Those were the days I first encountered the Kiganda dances and the language. One day I overhead her sending one of the kids to go and bring Gitta.

      I thought she meant a guitar! So I waited to see the traditional dancing metamorphose into a jazz festival but nothing changed. The Kiganda dance continued. Later I asked my younger brother Jimmy about the guitar that was supposed to be brought and what had happened to it. He burst into laughter and told me that Gitta is a Kiganda name. Talk about learning the hard way. I had lost sleep waiting for a guitar that never came.

      So today I pay tribute to Yudaya Namiro. I learnt Luganda thanks to her. She disciplined me and taught me self reliance. I remember during Amin’s time, when sometimes our father would be taken away for days and weeks. She would ensure that at least we had one hearty meal. Things would become clear when she would say during a late lunch “muliire ddala”, meaning this is a once and for all meal for the day.

      Eventually our father would return and normalcy would return in terms of regular meals. We had our arguments with my mother but never did I answer her back disrespectfully. As the urge to rebel, which is a characteristic of adolescence, took over there were tense moments. One time I even fled home for two weeks and became a full time gambler playing cards in a bid to raise money and buy a train ticket to Gulu. Of course that episode ended in an interesting way but the details have to wait.

      When I became Makerere Guild President in 1990, she prevailed upon my father to host my entire cabinet and core campaign team members to a massive feast at home. She sent a coaster to ferry us to Jinja. Upon graduating with a law degree she threw me the mother of all parties at Crested Cranes Hotel.

      The cake must have had about two dozen tiers shaped like law books with the subjects written on. It was big. An all night affair. In her speech she said my siblings now had no excuse to say they don’t have a role model. They had to excel in whatever field they choose.

      Her death saddened me extremely. By then I was in parliament. I did all I could to keep her alive but eventually she succumbed. I made sure she had a befitting send off. She lies at Lacor next to her husband, my father. To date she is the mother I talk about most.

      Biological mother

      Now back to the tale of my biological mother. Through twists and turns and the pressure I mounted on my father eventually he was persuaded to take me to see my mother. We got into his Land Rover Defender 110 and headed to Isingiro. I was eighteen and a student of Namilyango.

      We got lost a number of times, taking wrong turns in the hills of Isingiro but men never forget the paths they tread in the heat of young love. They know where the women who once quickened their pulses reside. We reached my grandparents home. It was very different from Gulu, Bukaya, Bwobo.

      The language was also different. My mother hugged me. She broke down in tears saying she thought I was dead! I felt awkward. Here was the woman who carried me in her womb for nine months and later walked away. I could have crawled to the fireplace getting fatally burnt, I could have crawled outside and been overran by a vehicle, anything could have happened.

      My heart and mind were in turmoil. But like one of my professors used to say, ‘text without context is pretext’. Who was I to judge my mother! What would I have done in her shoes? I found the grace, courage and compassion to tell my mother how grateful I was to see her finally and that I was doing fine thanks to the kindness of so many mothers and other people. I told her I understood.

      She looked relieved. Fear and guilt was drowned by forgiveness and the joy around us. She introduced me to everyone as her long lost son. Then she sat down and symbolically carried me on her lap rocking me like a baby. Tears flowed freely from her eyes. That is how I found the courage to forgive my mother and make meaning of a phase in my life that had been a puzzle.

      I gave my mother one last hug because we had to leave. As we left Isingiro late afternoon, I tried to make sense of it all. I had met my biological mother. What disturbed me was that there was no real glue between us beyond the fact that she had carried me in her womb, delivered me and cared for me for eight months.

      Today I pay tribute to my mother. My biological mother. My real mother. She was only seventeen when she met my father. She remarried and had other children. I have so far managed to trace three of the children from my mother’s womb. I traced one of them all the way in Baghdad, Iraq and finally got to see him when he returned from his tour of duty. I encourage them to come home whenever they can. I love them because they are the only link I have with my mother who died about thirteen years ago. God bless your soul mother.

      So, again, Happy Mothers Day! I mean it. All men are a work in progress. Ask your mother, or sister or wife. Every calendar day should be Mothers Day.

      in reply to: The problem of Uganda political class #1420

      Recently, a flight was delayed by USA security agencies for almost a whole day in a US city because an “Arab-looking” Italian professor of economics aboard the plane was reported to have been scribbling some “terrorist looking ” Equation on his notepad. He was due to deliver a lecture at a prestigious US University.

      Talk of citizens having a say in how their country is govern!!
      Lol!

      in reply to: The problem of Uganda political class #1419

      Two weeks ago 400 Americans were arrested in New York for protesting peacefully against too much money being used in politics.
      Last week also USA presidential candidates cried loudly against what they termed “rigging” and unfair habits by their political parties. Ask Trump, for example.
      You are barely a year in Uganda, and you are quick to lecture us on democracy and freedom of association And tell us to rise and defend human rights, madam ?

      in reply to: The problem of Uganda political class #1418

      When was the last time an African ambassador went to the U.S and complained about; the prison industrial complex system, the unfair incarceration of blacks and latinos in America, police brutality against blacks and other minorities, the un-democratic election system that puts the vote of ” delegates and super delegates ” ahead of everyday citizen’s votes ; when was the last time that African ambassadors interfered with the American electoral process, where a citizen’s vote doesn’t count? When?? When was the last time??? When Ms. Ambassador, when???

      And since she added: “ We have spoken out because we believe that the Ugandan people deserve to live in a country where every voice is heard and matters. That can only happen when citizens have a say in how their country is governed. It can only happen when government is held accountable. It is the democratic process that we support…” ; We as Ugandans, have spoken out because we believe that the African American and Latino people deserve to live in a country where every voice is heard and matters. That can only happen when citizens have a say in how their country is governed. It can only happen when government his held accountable. It is the democratic process that we support…as Ugandans. Now what?

      Ms.Ambassador, no disrespect, but you need a piece of humble pie. Why would we allow you to jeopardize the peace that we have in our country. You just came to Uganda, and you need to humble yourself and take time to understand our culture. We are a humble people. Uganda has come a long way and this is not a zoo.Your zoo to play with. We elected our President through democratic means. Who do you think you are to get involved in our politics?? What makes you, a foreigner, better than us that you can come to our country and tell us what to do??? You would never let us come to your country and tell you what to do, so why would you come to our country and tell us what to do? When you had the occupy wall street demonstration, did you see any African ambassadors getting involved in that situation? No. It wasnt their place to comment on that because they were diplomats and thats not what diplomats do.Who do you think you are??? What gives you the right? the jurisdiction? …Something tells you that we’re savages??? and that we need your 2 cents??? and that unless you’re involved, then its not democracy etc ???….Seriously, who do you think you are??? What makes you think that you’re better than us??? You think you’re David Livingstone? Or Stanley?….and this is the 1900’s???….Who do you think you are???!!! You’re just an ambassador. You’re a guest. Have respect for Uganda and our democratically elected President!
      Proud Citizen of Uganda

      in reply to: The problem of Uganda political class #1416

      It all started a few months ago when Malac hosted friends, Embassy officials, diplomats and government representatives at her residence in Kampala during her welcome party.

      Malac, who arrived in Uganda a few weeks to the general elections, invited President Museveni for the function.

      It was Vice President Hon Edward Ssekandi who appeared at the residence for the ceremony.

      Interestingly, before Ssekandi gave his speech, Malac blasted the Ugandan government for abusing human rights, suppressing civil liberties and failure to tackle corruption among other things.
      “Most of us who attended this function were embarrassed. Malac had not even spent a month in the country but she was already berating its leadership,” said a diplomat who attended the function.

      “It appears she arrived in Uganda with a preconceived attitude towards government.”

      The source, who preferred anonymity so as to speak freely, said Ssekandi did not respond to the accusations but chose to read from the prepared speech.

      “If it were in other countries, Malac would have faced a barrage of criticism from government. She has expressed determination to order government on what to do which is not acceptable here,” a source at the Foreign Affairs Ministry told ChimpReports on Monday morning.

      It is understood that while in Liberia before being posted to Uganda, Malac was being consulted by the heavily-donor-dependent country on most of its major decisions.

      “When Malac came to Uganda, she did not fully appreciate the background of the country’s leadership and how things run here. We have taken steps to educate her and improve relations but it appears our efforts are not paying off,” the concerned official added.

      Uganda’s ties with U.S. were further strained during and after the elections.

      After the February 18 polls, Malac attended the Post-Election Symposium on Youth, Democracy and Governance where she blasted government’s actions against opposition.

      “The social media shutdown, the detention of opposition figures, the harassment of media – all of these things combined with the poor organization of the election have weakened Uganda’s democracy and tarnished Uganda’s image as a strong democracy in a turbulent region,” charged Malac.

      She added: “We have spoken out because we believe that the Ugandan people deserve to live in a country where every voice is heard and matters. That can only happen when citizens have a say in how their country is governed. It can only happen when government is held accountable. It is the democratic process that we support…”

      In her conclusive remarks, Malac hit the nail on the head: “But the bottom line is that you must do something and take the responsibility upon yourselves to make things happen. I challenge all of you today to try and put your ideas into action, because by simply accepting the status quo, you only guarantee that things will remain the same.”

      Government officials protested the remarks which they said bordered on interfering with Uganda’s internal affairs.

      Plan B

      Sources said government is considering bypassing Malac and the U.S. embassy in Kampala in its dealing with Washington.

      “We shall have to deal directly with Pentagon on defence issues and White House on matters to do with foreign policy,” said a high ranking official.

      “Malac will end up being isolated and inconsequential. We will make her deal with junior officials because of her attitude towards us,” the source confirmed.

      Government spokesperson Ofwono Opondo said in a statement that since the publication of the Uganda Presidential Election results, none of the observer groups has come with credible evidence to challenge the results posted by Electoral Commission.

      “We therefore wish to ask them to either adduce evidence or keep their peace for good. Otherwise, we know that some groups in the US and EU, including diplomats accredited to Uganda, funded and are still funding opposition elements in Uganda to cause government change outside the constitutional framework but are disappointed this hasn’t been successful as yet,” warned Opondo.

      “The U.S., which uses raw power to project its influence and interests around the world, is the least competent to ask other nations for democratic accountability. Uganda’s democracy is progressing well and we are satisfied with both the pace and achievements registered so far.”

      In reference to accusations of interference, Malac recently observed:” Let me reiterate, however, what we have said before: We respect the sovereignty of the government of Uganda, and we do not support any one individual or political party.”

      She added: “We have spoken out because we believe that the Ugandan people deserve to live in a country where every voice is heard and matters. That can only happen when citizens have a say in how their country is governed. It can only happen when government is held accountable. It is the democratic process that we support.”

      U.S. spends millions of dollars every year on Uganda’s healthcare system.

      in reply to: How Yoweri Museveni Cheated Elections #1414

      FDC OBSCENITY & DISRESPECT FOR OTHERS’ FUNDAMENTAL HUMAN RIGHTS IS THE ROOT CAUSE TO THEIR 20 YEAR GUINESS RECORD FOR THE MOST SERIOUS AND MOST PERSISTENT POLITICAL FAILURES IN AFRICA.


      When you hear them talk the word “human rights” in reference to ‪#‎Besigye‬, you might think most FDC subscribers actually know what the word means. I am astonished by those who attack and insult ME and others on Social Media without due regard to our fundamental liberties they so seek for themselves. Talk about absolute selfishness.
      When I read most insulting posts from especially FDC cult members particularly with Western Uganda and Kiganda names like ‪#‎Kobusingye‬, I feel very sorry for Dr Kizza Besigye. I wonder what kind of Government he will have but I am sure obscenity will have to be adopted as the official language for Uganda. These people have no brains and yet think they are the clever ones and others are not. Too worrying. I actually request everyone who has ever insulted me never to vote for me in my life time. Your votes actually stink Just like the ver on of your insults. I will insist and keep to the Eastern Part of the Nile because un surprisingly all the filth or most of it is from Western Uganda. Sorry but you disgust me. Oh by the way, I doubt any of you has acquired any medical certificate of any form. If you cannot diagnose your own insanity and insult a presidential candidate to that extent yet most of you are as cheap as peanut butter, then you surely need to line up for your Butabika. You are such a waste of space and very big obstacle to Uganda’s development. Believe me never vote for me because I will make you sorry that you insulted me or anyone you find on the street for that matter. Everyone rigs for M7 because they fear the Besigye filthy government. Even FDC people accept bribes and shy away. Stop making noise, there are no bigger moles than you. You stole Mbabazi’s money and then voted your failing FDC. Cowards only. How can you call yourselves men and fear a very small woman to this extent. You will not stop me, just make yourselves better than me.

      in reply to: How Yoweri Museveni Cheated Elections #1413

      Does Dr.Besigye and some FDC members think foward or Backwards?
      On Monday FDC General Secretary Hon.Nandala Mafabi while at the part headquarters in Najanankumbi informed Uganda and FDC members that from 5th may they are going to start a national wide demonstration for an International Audit for the February presidential elections. After elections the constitution allows any candidate who is not satisfied with the results to petition to the courts of law and challenge the results. Its so unfortunate that FDC members they didn’t file any case hopping that they will stage riot just after elections and they take over the government after loosing the elections but they found Uganda police seeing. When that mission failed the Party spokesperson Hon. Semuju announced work boycott and Thursday prayers but the program flopped also. Now they are busy arranging riot to take the media and international attention of Presidents swearing in on 12th,May like what they did in 2011. At this time like any party that needs to grow and takeover power they should be arranging to chose their parliament speaker and looking into the lope holes that caused their failure or stealing of votes. My conclusion is Dr. Besigye and some of his people except Gen. Mugisha thinks backward and the FDC may end up not ruling Ugandan until Jesus come back. Now he’s busy saying that museveni is not swearing in as if he’s dreaming. FDC can only rule Uganda after getting another presidential candidate than Besigye who is confusing his followers.

      in reply to: How Yoweri Museveni Cheated Elections #1412

      Does this government know that KIU releases fake doctors to the community? ?KIU has almost 600 students studying medicine without even an hospital at Kampala campus! !. .You can easily become a doctor at this university nomatter whether you have the grades or not as long as you have money. .Does this govt monitor the many fake clinics in this country? Is there a genuine Pharmacy in Uganda?A DISTRICT HEALTH OFFICER SHOULD BE A DOCTOR BUT I KNOW MANY UNDER THIS REGIME WHO ARE S.6 DROP OUTS..UGANDA ISTHE ONLY COUNTRY WITH MANY NATIVE DOCTORS THAN MEDICAL DOCTORS..UNTIL WHEN SHOULD WE LOOSE OUR DEAR ONES TO CURABLE DISEASES??AND YOU THE GENUINE DOCTORS REMEMBER YOUR DUTY.THINK ABOUT ONE’S HEALTH BEFORE MONEY..BEING A DOCTOR ISNT JUST A TITTLE..LETS HELP OUR FELLOW COUNTRYMEN..DONT STEAL MEDICINE MEANT FOR MULAGO HOSP. TO YOUR CLINIC WHICH IS MANNED BY YOUR WIFE WHO IS A FARMER JUST COZ YOU WANT MONEY.YOUR ONE OF THE BEST PAID IN THE COUNTRY BAMBI TRY..BE KIND..

      in reply to: How Yoweri Museveni Cheated Elections #1410

      Dear Besigye.

      Baganda have no obligation to support you.There has never been a law passed or a refrendum held where a verdict was reached that Buganda/Mengo must support.You are not a saint.Do not dare us. Leave Buganda alone and concentrate on fighting your 50yr plan succession battle with your fellow westerners.Because to some of us,you are fighting to also eat.Nothing more.Those other things you keep telling the media are just covers.Sijui rule of law,Ugandans taking back their country……….Just like Museveni fought to eat in 1980 but ofcourse blinded Ugandans/Baganda with his ten point program.

      .You can not pretend to love Baganda more than Mengo.I don’t know of any poverty fighting program or education program you are running in Buganda.Probably fighting you wars in markets?

      In any case,Baganda sacrificed alot during the bush war but instead,it is you and others,who came here wearing torn clothes who are now annoyingly rich.

      I dare you Besigye to explain how you became filthly rich and particularly how you acquired that land in Kasanganti.What guarantee do we have that you Besigye will eliminate poverty when you get into power?Wasn’t it you who wrote a letter to Luzira prison ordering that all Baganda who had been framed and remanded on treason charges were never to be given medical attention like Ssemwogerere who was your senior had asked?Humiliating Ssemwogerere in the process?Weren’t you in internal affairs when Kayiira was assassinated?I don’t remember you releasing any report on his death.

      Were you not among people who brutalised Ssemwogerere’s campaign team in western Uganda in addition to rigging him out with the likes of Muhwezi and Charles Rwomushana?You and others nullified any vote Ssemwogerere scored at polling stations in Rukungiri.Now,when I see you crying that you have been rigged out,I praise God for God makes us reap what we sow.You sowed vote rigging while in govt,you are reaping.

      How often did you visit ordinary people and helped them when you were commandent in Masaka mechanised brigade?

      Baganda gave you votes.If you failed to guard them and lost,those are your problems.

      Do you know why Muliika,a man who staked his Katikkiroship in 2006 and supported you,gave you Buganda’s structures to campaign no longer associates with you?

      Well he got tired of your “I was rigged lamentations”

      in reply to: How Yoweri Museveni Cheated Elections #1409

      UGANDA HAS CEALED OFF ALL ITS BOARDERS: UPDF HAS BEEN DEPLOYED ON ALL BOARDERS OF THE STATE DUE TO FEAR OF AN EMINENT ATTACK. IT IS CONFIRMED THAT USA, CHAINA, BRITAIN AND SPAIN HAVE COMBINED FORCES AND JOINED UGANDANS TO CRASH THE DICTATOR ON MAY 5TH. THE PRO PEOPLE FORCES ARE CAMPING ALMOST IN ALL BOARDERING STATES. THEY WILL ATTACK UGANDA FROM ALL SIDES AND CAPTURE THE STATE IN LESS THAN 48HRS. THE DICTATOR CANT BREATH BECUASE HE KNOWS VERY WELL THAT HE WILL BE GRABBED LIKE A DOG AND PUT WHERE HE BELONGS

      in reply to: How Yoweri Museveni Cheated Elections #1408

      SAFETY MESSAGE TO ALL TAKING PART IN THE PRO- INDEPENDENT ELECTION AUDIT MARCH
      05/05/2016
      1. When walking, protesting, FORWARD WE GO!!!
      NO MATTER THE POLICE attempts to shoot at us.
      2. In every action, walking, woe Police to join the liberation through liberation songs! etc., DO IT IN
      BIG NUMBERS;
      3. Teargas: CARRY WITH YOU WATER, LEMON AND ORANGES
      4. Patriotism, to capture the international media attention (remember Tahiri Square, the Arab Spring, Maidan Square in Ukraine, you always saw people with FLAGS): Carry with you a Uganda flag (and FDC’s) and a white peace flag at all times!!!
      5. When Police come after you, in big numbers: DON’T RUN.
      6. When Police/security agencies attempt to arrest you: NEVER ALLOW THIS [justification:We’ll be peaceful UNLESS provoked]. No amount of force would make Police to arrest more than 100 people when there are over 100,000 on streets.
      7. For more symbolism (give our “people’s power” through an independent Election Audit …and give the day a unique outlook and symbolism), carry with you or come in a HOODIE [if possible]
      8. The majority of Ugandans are on social media and through the mainstream media like the press and others. HELP TO PUBLISH AND PUBLICIZE ANY DAY’S ACTIONS, INFORM THE REST, INFORM THE WORLD.
      9. If a comrade/colleague is injured/wounded, don’t ignore him: HELP THE INJURED [give first
      aid]
      10-Doctors, nurses and all competent people in health matters are requested to COME PREPARED TO HELP THOSE INJURED DURING THE MARCH.
      11. As this is to be a SUSTAINED DEMONSTRATION [PROTEST] when people’s power is at its peak, it might mean that we would be on the streets day and night: COME WITH EATS AND BITES [DRINKS] including say a 1 liter bottle of drinking water [or anything].
      12. Assume leadership immediately, don’t run, don’t grieve; we’ll grieve after liberation: POLICE MIGHT ARREST OR KILL OUR LEADERS, BUT THIS SHOULD INSPIRE US, ANYONE SHOULD FILL THE VOID (empty space) CURVED (created)
      13. The international media would be watching; if we choose to walk our president to State House, there might be a price to pay (Police would definitely attempt or definitely SHOOT AT US), BUT the international Community would be with us: THE INTERNATIONAL CRIMINAL COURT (ICC) ARE WATCHING EVERY ACTION UGANDA’S SECURITY AGENCIES TAKE!!!
      14. Act confident(ly), yet with precaution: NO retreat, NO turning back…forward we must go! No surrender till the majority goal is achieved. Simply put: NO RETREAT, NO SURRENDER!
      15-Supposing social media is blocked, USE FOREIGN VPNs (Virtual Private Networks) to have access to your social media networks or accounts or communication APPS: Facebook, WhatsApp, Viber, Twitter, Skype etc.
      For certainty, the Internet will remain accessible, so for as long as the Internet is their, people should consider the idea of VPNs. These points are to be summarised and refined as deemed necessary. We’ve tried to be descriptive to make you know what we mean(t) by each and every
      RULE/POINT.
      These survival guidelines might be the yardstick [gauge] of the people’s power due on 05th May 2016.
      Kindly add more safety tips for all peaceful demonstrators.
      PUBLICIZE THIS MESSAGE TO ALL CITIZENS TAKING PART IN THE MARCH
      The New Form of Thinking(NFT)’s
      National Planning Council (NPC).

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