Category Archives: Uganda

Kenya & Uganda: East African States in joint efforts to combat terrorists in the region

Security News By Leo Odera Omolo In Kisumu City

Kenya and Uganda have stepped up joint operations aimed at keeping on check the infiltrations of Al-Shabaab Islamist terrorist from the neighboring Somalia.

The efforts has yielded in score of suspected terrorists agents being nabbed over the weekend after being fished out of their hideouts in both Nairobi and the country’s coastal town of Mombasa. Some of them suspects in connection to the July 11, bombing of a crowded public joint in the Ugandan capital, Kampala have since been flown to that country to be enjoined in criminal charges with their accomplices already in custody in Uganda.

Reports emerging from the Kenya’s coastal town of Lamu an Island on the Indian Ocean, says Kenya Anti-Terrorism Police Unit {ATPU} disclosed at the weekend that they were holding twelve suspects they found with materials for bombs and instruction documents targeting certain installation and buildings in the Kenyan capital, Nairobi.

The discovery, the ATPU says was made at Mpeketoni location on Lamu Island in the Indian Ocean. The Island is the closest Kenyan location to the troubled Somalia border.

Itrher sources the suspect arrested in Nairobi include a wonan and the three children in whose house suspected foreigners linked to terrorists were found hiding.

At the same time, two suspected terrorists’ agents have been arrested in Mombasa on suspected criminal, offences connected to the July 11 bombing of a crowded public joint in Kampala which resulted in the death of 76 people. They were immediately flown to Uganda where they are expected to be enjoined in criminal charges alongside their accomplices already in custody in that country.

The two were seized fro their operational hideout at the weekend in Nyali suburb of the coastal town of Mombasa.

Also in the capital, Nairobi, the police reported that they were holding six people in connection with suspected terrorist’s activities.

The other suspects in Lamu case said to be Kenyans, and the police have confirmed that they still interrogating them with the view to finding out their mission was hatched and planned and who is behind it

He group also had bomb making materials, which the sleuths believe they got from the neighboring Somalia.

“We do not know their mission, but all I can say is that we have succeeded in averting something very serious,” a police source is quoted by the STANDARD of having said this.

The suspects were arrested on Saturday morning and were later brought to Mombasa, where they were until last Sunday being grilled. And after interrogation, the suspects are said to have disclosed the location of their accomplices, whom were later picked up from their hideout in Malindi Town.

The police said they got the tips on the arrival of Tanzanian before they swiftly moved into action.

The arrests came barely a month after terrorist linked to Al-Shabaab detonated bombs in Kampala.Uganda killing more than 76 people. At least ten Kenyans are being held in Uganda over the bombing at a public joint on July 11,2010.

The latest arrests were of one Suleiman Abdi Hamed who was nabbed from his Nairobi South C Estate House in an operation mounted by teams of hooded policemen led by detectives. Te arrest three days after the Mombasa arrests over the same crime confessed by their accomplices that they were getting training in Somalia.

The arrests came after a month long of thorough investigations. The ATPU Chief at the Coast Elijah Tirop said the suspects are of Pakistani ANS Kenyan descent, adding that some seven vehicles suspected to have been stolen were also recovered in the suspect compound.

“I can confirm that the two suspect have been arrested in connection with the Kampala bombing and they will also take to Uganda an charged.” said Tirop.

He disclosed that to facilitate the arrest was a joint effort with the help of international security agencies and Kenyans sleuths. The agencies had been tipped by the accomplices of the suspects now in custody in Uganda.

Ends

leooderaomolo@yahoo.com

UGANDA’S OPPOSITION INTER-PARTY COALITION IS ONTHE VERGE OF COLLAPSE FILLOWING UPC’S CLAIMS OF LACK OF TRANSPARENCY

Reports Leo Odera Omolo

The opposition Inter-Party Cooperation (IPC) coalition on Wednesday appeared to be on the verge of collapse as officials from one of the parties accused its leaders of not being transparent.

The Uganda People’s Congress (UPC) party’s secretary general, Joseph Bossa, said there were many loopholes in the coalition that UPC needs to discuss before taking part in the nominations.

“We have important concerns to do with good faith and transparency that we need to address in a very serious manner with the IPC summit. After reaching an understanding, then we shall have our candidate nominated,” Bossa told journalists at a press briefing.

IPC is a loose coalition of five political parties which seeks to front a single candidate to dislodge President Yoweri Museveni from power in next year’s elections.

But faultlines have already emerged in the alliance, which has been shunned by the Democratic Party.

Bbosa said they have called for the meeting of IPC summit to agree on the way forward.

On Tuesday, anxiety gripped members of the opposition after UPC’s leader, Olara Otunnu, failed to turn up for nominations of the 2011 joint candidate at Kololo Airstrip.

However, UPC’s presidential envoy, Patrick Mwondha, told the gathering that the warrant of arrest issued by a magistrate in Lira district prevented Otunnu from participation.

FDC president Kizza Besigye, Makerere University lecturer Prof. James Kigongo (Conservative Party), Makindye West MP Hussein Kyanjo (Justice Forum) and Makindye East MP Michael Mabikke (Social Democratic Party) were successfully nominated. Otunnu was given up to Monday to hand in his papers for nominations.

Bossa explained that apart from the on-going court case, Otunnu had travelled to London before the official nomination date was communicated.

Joseph Ochieno, a member of UPC, said Besigye had turned the IPC into an FDC thing.

“Main positions in IPC are headed by FDC members while other parties are given small positions,” Ochieno noted.
Otunnu’s press secretary, Robert Kanusu, said IPC should not give deadlines to any one for nominations if it is a focused coalition.

Ends

Ugandan father kills his son for ritual sacrifices and buried him in a shallow grave

Writes Leo Odera Omolo

David Mwesigye suffocated his son to death. He then carried the body from his home in Kisowera along the Mukono-Kayunga road to Godfrey Ssajjabi, a witchdoctor in Kigunga, about 15km on the Kampala-Jinja highway.

Godfrey Ssajjabbi (left) a witchdoctor and David Mwesigye a father to Derrick Mutebi who was sacrificed

Under the cover of darkness, the two dug a hole at the edge of the witchdoctor’s compound, placed the body in the hole and planted a banana sucker to avoid suspicion.

It was Saturday 23rd September, 2007. Only Mwesigye and the witchdoctor knew that little Derrick Mutebi was no more. At the age of one and a half years, he had been brutally killed by his father, a television technician, the very person who was supposed to nurture him.

By coincidence the boy’s mother, Ephransi Namuddu, who had separated from Mwesigye, felt the urge to go and see her son.

When she did not find her son in the house, Mwesigye lied to her that the boy was living with his grandmother in Maganjo on the Kampala-Gayaza road.

She went all the way to Maganjo, only to be told that Mwesigye had not taken the boy there. It was then that she reported to Police that her son had gone missing.

Mwesigye was arrested and he led Police to the witchdoctor’s place where they had buried the body. Police exhumed the body and took it to Kawolo Hospital for a postmortem.

As Mwesige confessed in court on Wednesday, he could not come to terms with what he had done to his own son.

He broke down and cried while testifying before a special High Court Session in Mukono which was presided over by Justice Jane Kiggundu.

“I didn’t intend to kill him. I was only disciplining him,” he pleaded.
Initially Mwesigye claimed that the boy had been electrocuted. But his landlord, Katende Bumali, testified that he did not have electricity in the house.

Later he changed, claiming he was only administering a disciplinary beating when they boy died. But the post-mortem report from Lugazi hospital showed that the boy suffocated to death.

The report also showed that the child’s genitals were partially detached.
Left with no other lie to tell, the two pleaded guilty. But they pleaded for lenience arguing that they were first offenders.

Mwesigye added that he had learnt a bitter lesson that it was not proper to punish a child like an animal, and that he would not repeat the offence.

Their lawyer, Musa Sembajja, also asked court to be lenient to them by giving them the minimum sentences because they had not wasted court’s time by denying the offence.

The lawyer further asked that the witchdoctor should be given a lighter sentence of seven years in jail since he did not participate in the killing. “He only accepted to have the body buried at his place.

The only offense he committed was that he never informed Police.”
But the Resident State Attorney Gladys Nyanzi asked court to give the duo a maximum sentence, which is death.

She argued that killing one’s own child and cutting off the genitals was strong evidence of ritual murder, for which the two should be severely punished.

Nyanzi said that by killing the boy, Mwesigye violated the responsibility given to him by the Constitution to protect his children’s rights to life.

“The boy suffered twice when Mwesigye chased his mother from home and when he killed him.

This is a case of murder of a child. It is one of the child sacrifice cases which are rampant in Uganda today. It is my request that in your sentence you show that murder is punishable in the courts of law,” she added.

Nyanzi explained that Ssajjabi was equally responsible for killing the boy because he did not report the matter to the Police.

“Child sacrifice is an inhuman habit that must be fought. Scenarios have shown that body parts of human beings are on a high demand by the witchdoctors.

The deceased’s genitals were partially detached meaning that they were the target,” she said. “I therefore appeal for the same sentence for Ssajjabi.”

The ruling was set to be made yesterday but the judge postponed it to Monday after the defence lawyer asked for an opportunity for his clients to make an additional plea.

He argues that much as they pleaded guilty to the murder, it was not ritual sacrifice as depicted by prosecution.

ends

Uganda: Otunnu snubs Inter-parties joint nomination for a presidential candidate

Reports Leo Odera Omolo

ANXIETY gripped members of the opposition when the Uganda People’s Congress (UPC) leader, Olara Otunnu, did not turn up for the nomination of the 2011 joint candidate at Kololo Airstrip yesterday.

The tent for the UPC supporters remained empty as the exercise kicked off at 10:30am, raising fears that Otunnu, who has been advocating for a single opposition candidate, had snubbed the function.

FDC president Dr. Kizza Besigye, Makerere University lecturer Prof. James Kigongo (Conservative Party), Makindye West MP Hussein Kyanjo (Justice Forum) and Makindye East MP Michael Mabikke (Social Democratic Party) were successfully nominated.

The Inter-Party Coalition (IPC) electoral affairs commission leader, Maj. Rubaramira Ruranga, said they had been notified about Otunnu’s absence.

“We received communication that our friends in UPC will not be able to participate in today’s process because they have a court case,” he said.

UPC’s presidential envoy Patrick Mwondha said a warrant of arrest issued by a magistrate in Lira district prevented Otunnu from participation.
Other sources, however, said Otunnu was out of the country.

“The warrant meant that he could be arrested wherever he could be found,” Mwondha said.

He, however, said the Constitutional Court had yesterday issued a temporary order quashing the warrant.
He assured the opposition that UPC was still committed to the IPC.

“We shall work together to fight the dictatorship of this government which had intended to halt us from taking part in this function,” he stated.
On August 3, the Lira Magistrate’s Court issued a warrant of arrest for Otunnu after he failed to appear in court to answer sedition and sectarianism charges.

Meanwhile, the Democratic Party has ruled out joining the coalition.
DP leader Nobert Mao said his party would work closely with IPC to ensure free and fair elections.

He said DP would compare notes with the coalition, especially in identifying candidates for the parliamentary and local council elections.

“If they don’t accept our proposals, we shall field candidates everywhere and tussle it out during the elections,” Mao told a weekly press briefing at City House, Kampala.

He hailed the newly-proposed political parties’ consultative forum that was launched at Hotel Africana yesterday. “We believe this forum, if well used, will highlight some of the concerns of Ugandans,” Mao said.

Former Buganda premier Joseph Ssemwogerere, who was introduced at the nomination centre as an elder, lauded the IPC leaders for subjecting themselves to a democratic process.
He said Uganda needs a change in governance.

“We should all stand up and say no to the cancer of corruption. I call upon Ugandans to shake off fear. We must give Ugandans hope,” Ssemwogerere said.

Besigye said he was still a prisoner “on temporary bail on cases which were tramped up in 2005.”

“This shows why we need to get rid of dictatorship in this country,” Besigye said.

JEEMA’s Kyanjo said he would focus on environmental protection, sound land use and clean leadership.
CP’s Kigongo said his governance would usher in a federal government so that there is equitable sharing of resources.

Mabikke said his party looks at the peaceful transfer of power as the only way to move the country forward.

Ends

Uganda: Bomb blast suspect in court to answer criminal charges

Writes Leo odera Omolo In Kisumu City

Dozens of suspects accused of involvement in the July 11 twin bombings in Kampala appearing before the Nakawa Court in Kampala yesterday

Dozens of suspects accused of involvement in the July 11 twin bombings in Kampala appearing before the Nakawa Court in Kampala yesterday

ANOTHER 32 suspects were yesterday charged with terrorism, murder and attempted murder, following the July 11 bomb blasts which killed at least 79 people in Kampala. Four Kenyans had earlier been charged over the same offences.

Each of the suspects who appeared in court yesterday faces 78 capital offences. Among the accused were Ugandans, Kenyans, Somalis and a Pakistani.

They appeared before Nakawa Chief Magistrate Deo Sejjemba in a heavily guarded courtroom. About 60 armed security officers surrounded the court premises.

Edward Ochom, the head of criminal investigations, was in charge of security at the court.

The suspects arrived at the court in two batches, handcuffed and under heavy guard. Some walked with difficulty.

Some came aboard a passenger omni-bus taxi and saloon cars with tinted windows.

The prosecutor said each of the accused were responsible for the murder of the 60 people who died at Kyadondo Rugby Club and 15 at the Ethiopian Village Restaurant in Kabalagala, where the bombs exploded. They also face three offences of terrorism and 10 of attempted murder.

Immediately after the accused were charged, the prosecutor applied to have them remanded in police cells for two weeks as opposed to taking them to Luzira Prison.

He explained that this would allow the Police easy access to the suspects for further investigation.

A big crowd gathered at the court but security refused them entry into the courtroom, except journalists and lawyers.

After the court proceedings, Police officers whisked the suspects away in 10 pick-up trucks to various Kampala police stations for further detention.

Ends

Uganda: Museveni pay full treament cost for Uganda muscian who suffered bullet wounds

Writes Leo Odera Omolo In Kisumu City

PRESIDENT Yoweri Museveni has paid all expenses for singer Bebe Cool’s further treatment in the US, including medical fees; travel expenses and upkeep for his wife Zuena Kirema and their two children, the deputy spokesman for State House, Linda Nabusayi, has confirmed.

Reggae music artiste Moses Ssali, also known as Bebe Cool, and his two aides, were shot by a special Police constable in January this year between Oasis Shopping Mall and Centenary Park.

Bebe Cool (right), wife Zuena and children will fly to USA to treat the bullet injuries he suffered

Bebe Cool, who was shot in the legs, was hospitalised at Nsambya Hospital for three weeks, and upon discharge, he sought expertise overseas. He currently moves in a wheelchair or with the help of clutches.

Museveni visited him at the hospital and offered to pay his medical bills. The President is a longtime associate of his father, veteran politician Jaberi Bidandi Ssali, although he (Bidandi) defected from NRM to form his own political party

Yesterday, Bebe Cool said: “I wrote to the President informing him about the recommended treatment in the US , he responded to the full budget and I appreciate the offer very much.”

Although he did not disclose the exact amount he got from State House, sources told New Vision that the singer was given over $75,000 (sh165m) “I will not discuss the amount of money I was given in respect to His Excellency. I will keep it to myself,” he asserted.

The singer flies out next week to Boston, US, but he did not disclose the hospital he is going to.

He said Dr. Emmanuel Okello and Dr. Steven Muwazi from Nsambya Hospital were coordinating with medics in Boston to complete his treatment.

He says his right leg still swells and he still has numbness in all legs.

Bebe Cool revealed that his bill, including the wheelchair, clutches, checks-ups and treatment costs for his injured aides, currently stands at sh30m.

Ends

Uganda: NEWVISION calls for the suspension of all oil deal until taxation law is enacted

Reports Leo Odera Omolo

THE Government has tabled a Bill requiring that oil companies provide the Uganda Revenue Authority, details of their annual returns. When the Income Tax Amendment Bill 2010 becomes law, the non-compliant companies face a penalty of between $50,000(sh110m) and $500,000(sh1.1b).

While the Government should be commended for trying to put in place measures to guard against this valuable natural resource, the tabling of this Bill now is a confirmation that the existing agreements with the oil companies were flawed. The bitter truth is that at the moment, we are relying on the goodwill of these oil companies as far as any revenue is concerned.

Uganda is, therefore, in a very precarious position and is likely to lose the $404m(sh808b) tax claim against Heritage because there was no legal framework governing such a payment.

We are even not sure whether what we are claiming is accurate because the existing agreements lack methodology of estimating what Uganda should be getting. This was how Hardman Petroleum went away without paying almost anything.

However, it is better late than never. This is not the time for the blame game, but for finding lasting solutions to avoid the oil curse. Uganda was desperate for foreign investors who could have taken advantage of our inexperience in the oil sector to put in place a skewed agreement.

Uganda should, therefore, suspend all transactions on oil exploitation and go back to the drawing board to ensure the country gets a more favourable deal.

For instance, it is ridiculous for Ugandan crude oil price to be fixed at $15(sh30,000) per barrel when the international market price is $80(sh16,000) per barrel. The oil exploitation phase is rather delayed until a solid legal framework is in place than rush and lose everything.

Ends

Leaders skips the crucial consultative meeting on Uganda’s next year elections

Reports Leo Odera Omolo

THE Inter-Party Cooperation (IPC) is to agree on the flag-bearer for the 2011 elections by consensus, officials said yesterday. Nominations take place today at Kololo Airstrip.

The publicity secretary of the Forum for Democratic Change party, Wafula Oguttu, said the coalition had set up a committee to convince candidates to choose the flag-bearer without elections.

The party’s president, Kizza Besigye, is among the five candidates due for nomination today. Other candidates are Hussein Kyanjo of Justice Forum, Prof. James Kigongo of the Conservative Party, Dr. Olara Otunnu of the Uganda Peoples Congress and Michael Mabikke of the Social Democratic Party.

The Democratic Party, led by Norbert Mao, has not yet joined the coalition.

“Candidates will first go into negotiations immediately after nominations.

Later, they will meet the eminent team for talks to decide on who should pull out and who should stand in for IPC,” Oguttu said.

The results will be announced on August 23, 2010. Besigye said: “After nominations we shall sit and decide as candidates and I do not know whether I will be the favourite candidate. I cannot say I am the best but I have experience and support.”

Kyanjo and Ken Lukyamuzi also said a negotiated candidate would create harmony among the members of the opposition

Ends

Uganda’s opinion polls show Museveni ahead of his rivals by 52 points per cent

Writes Leo Odera Omolo In Kisumu City

MORE than half of Ugandans say President Yoweri Museveni is the best candidate to solve their most pressing problems if re-elected, according to a New Vision opinion poll. They also rate his ruling NRM party highly, saying like Museveni, it will deal with their issues.

Heath, transport, education, children and employment are the top problems that Ugandans want candidates for next years’ elections to address, the countrywide poll revealed. Also on the list of 19 most pressing problems are personal security, agriculture, poverty alleviation and water and sanitation.

Overall, 52.72% said Museveni was the most capable. The other politicians mentioned each had less than 20%.

However, 18.41%, a significant portion of the electorate, is still undecided on who is the most capable candidate. It would appear that the candidate who addresses the most pressing needs could win the vote.

The respondents were asked to name a presidential candidate without being given alternatives to choose from.

“Museveni is doing his best; how¬ever, in most cases he is let down by his ministers and other people sup¬posed to implement decisions,” said a respondent from Butembe in Jinja.

This is the biggest survey under¬taken by a media house in Uganda. A total of 10,097 Ugandans of voting age, randomly selected in 67 counties, were asked to state their most pressing problems and who they thought would adequately provide solutions to them. The poll was conducted from June 21 to July 23 by New Vision in-house researchers.

Respondents were asked three questions. The first was about issues they wanted politicians to address during the campaigns. The other two were the political party and presidential candidate they thought would competently address the issues in the campaign and tackle them if elected.

Museveni, who is likely to be the ruling party flag-bearer of the NRM in the 2011 elections, was chosen by more than 50% of respondents as the best person to deliver on all the priority problems. The Forum for Democartic Change leader, Dr. Kizza Besigye, came second with 16.06%. Similarly, his party was second to the NRM.

It emerged that the contest was be¬tween the two leaders and their par¬ties. The other political parties and presidential candidates got between one and six percent, indicating the level of confidence in them is little. The DP boss, Norbert Mao, got 5.41% followed by Olara Otunnu of the UPC with 3.14%. Bidandi Ssali of the Peo¬ple’s Progressive Party got 1%. Support given to Besigye and the other politicians was 34.31%, leaving Museveni in a comfortable lead.

Overall confidence in Museveni was highest in western Uganda at 64.63%. This was followed by eastern Uganda at 54.05%, northern with 48.16% and central 44.94%. Even in central where Museveni scored least, he still beat Besigye by 26 percentage points.

Besigye’s best region was northern Uganda, where about 19% thought he would be the best candidate. This was followed by central at 18.68%, eastern, 16.77% and western with 9.92%. But even in the north, he was behind Mu¬seveni by 29 percentage points.

Museveni’s highest rating was on national security. Some 55% of the respondents said Museveni would be the best candidate to deal with nation¬al security. In all regions, more than half of respondents approved him for security. Such confidence was high¬est in western and eastern, at 65.2% and 55.3% respectively. In northern region, where peace has returned after over two decades of war, about 50% chose him for security.

This could mean the return to peace there might win Museveni votes in next year’s elections. But it was surprising that in central, which has been largely secure, only 50.4% said Museveni would handle national security. The survey took place before the bomb blasts in Kampala recently.

Museveni’s next best scores were on education 53%, roads 53.6%, personal security 53.2% and energy use 53%. Besigye’s highest score was on service delivery related to business, at 16.5%. Even then, Museveni was better on business, at 52.4%.

About 52% nationwide said Musev¬eni was the man who would deliver on traditional leaders, while only 15.5% said Besigye would improve the rela¬tionship between the Government and traditional leaders. Mao and Otuunu scored 5.9% and 2.9% respectively in this area.

Within central Uganda, Museveni had more support on dealing with traditional leaders at 43.6% as op¬posed to Besigye’s 17.9%. On political parities, more Ugandans had confidence in the NRM. About 53% said it would address their problems during the campaign and deal with them if elected. The rating for other political parties was 16.5% for FDC, 6.3% for DP, 3.4% for UPC and IPC had 1.4% IPC. The rest scored below 1%.

NRM gains in north slides in central

By VisionReporter
HALF of Ugandans are likely to vote for the NRM because they believe it can solve their problems. A New Vision poll gave the party 52.7%, while other parties combined managed 35.6%, leaving about 17% undecided.

Only 16.5% picked FDC, the party that has positioned itself as the immediate alternative to the NRM, which has been in power since 1986. Other main opposition parties like the DP and UPC did not attract much attention.

DP won the confidence of 6.3% and UPC 3.4%. Groups like the Inter–Party Cooperation and SUUBI formed recently to unite opposition parties to deny the NRM victory come next year, did not perform any better.

SUUBI, largely a Buganda pressure group, got 0.1% mostly in the central region. It had zero support in all the other three regions.

Respondents had no faith in the Peoples Progressive Party, the Conservative Party and JEEMA. As low as 0.5% mentioned the Peoples Progressive Party, only 0.3% picked CP and 0.1% went for JEEMA.

This left NRM as the favourite party to deal with all the 19 top issues Ugandans want the next president to tackle urgently.

It is arguable that the poll is an indicator that the ruling party will have an advantage over others.
Although the NRM’s rating in its former stronghold of the central region declined, it gained in the previously hostile northern area.

For instance, 40.6% in central had confidence in the ruling party, eastern had 50.4%, northern 52.9% and 69.2% in the western region, showing low support in central and growing acceptability in northern.

The poll is the first in a series of three to be conducted by New Vision in the run-up to the 2011 elections.

Analyst raps Opposition

By Barbara Among
Eighteen percent are undecided on who to vote president next year, according to a poll. While 52.7% would vote for Museveni, about 16% want FDC’s Kizza Besigye. DP’s Nor¬bert Mao has 5.41% followed by UPC’s Olara Otunnu at 3.14%. The new People’s Progressive Party leader, Bidandi Ssali, had 1% support.

Political scientist Aaron Mukwaya says the undecided voters could still be unconvinced by 2011 as most political parties are weak at the grassroots.

“Many voters are for grabs. Political parties must go on the ground. I feel so ashamed that the opposition spends time in Kampala conference rooms, hotels, yet the NRM has the state machinery and Museveni has made several trips around the country,” said Mukwaya.

Though voter turn-out has been less than 70% over the years, political parties are up¬beat about 2011. They cited the high turn-out during the just-concluded voter registration and update as a sign that many will vote next year.

NRM deputy spokesperson Ofwono Opondo believes the ongoing party activities will at¬tract the undecided to the party. The party plans to carry out primaries and elect the 2011 flag-bearer next month.

“Once we have gone through the primaries, there will be nomination. The process will keep the momentum,” said Of¬wono.

FDC spokesperson Wafula Oguttu said the party will tar¬get voters based on their age groups. The party believes that each age group has different de¬mands and views. “We are looking at the democratic segments of them (voters), we are going to look at age sets. They have dif¬ferent demands,” said Oguttu.

He said the party’s manifesto will focus on poverty alleviation and the economy.

“Last time, we were very elicit and concentrated on corruption but we are going to break that down and focus on issues of social service,” he added.

How survey was done

Researcher Stephen Mugarura said the number of respondents was established using the Fisherman’s sampling methodology, which ensures that the sample is representative of the voting population.

The 67 counties were chosen from the 77 districts that existed at the time of the survey. The number of districts has grown to 112. The counties were selected randomly from the regions under which they were listed.

Not more than two counties were picked from the same district. Within a county, four villages were randomly selected – the rural and the urban equally represented.

In each village, interviewers began at the LC1 office which acted as a sampling point. A pencil perpendicularly standing on its nib was dropped and the interviewers headed in the direction it pointed.

Using an interval of five households, they interviewed people aged 18 and above. Overall, 55% were male and 45% female. Rural-based respondents were 56% and 44% were urban.

The Vision Group research department has long experience in carrying out market research and opinion polling.

Ends

Uganda: Olara Otunu predicts that oil revenue in nation will be eaten up in their basket of corruption

Writes Leo Odera Omolo

In an exclusive interview with the Reuters News Agency in New York the leader of Uganda’s UPC opposition party, Dr Olara Otunnu whois hoping to topple President Museveni in the next year’s presidential election has predicted that the massive oil revenue which his country is expecting to generate once the production began would melt in the pots and pockets of the corrupt individuals.

His comments over this subject has sparked off sharp reactions from supporters of the NRM government at home and abroad.

Corruption will swallow billions of dollars in revenue from the country’s budding oil industry that is needed to build schools, hospitals and roads, says a Ugandan opposition leader.

Olara Otunnu, a former UN under secretary-general who heads the Uganda People’s Congress party, said there had been no transparency on plans to develop the oil found in 2006 along Uganda’s border with the Democratic Republic of Congo.

Otunnu, Uganda’s foreign minister from 1985-86, hopes to topple longtime President Yoweri Museveni when the country goes to the polls in February next year ahead of the start of commercial oil production at the end of the year.

British firms Tullow Oil and Heritage Oil have found up to 2 billion barrels of oil in the Albertine Rift Basin and experts say the reserves could be four times bigger. Uganda stands to earn about $2b a year in oil revenue.

“Based on the current record all that money would be swindled,” Otunnu told Reuters in an interview in New York.

“All this is being handled personally and exclusively at the kitchen table of the president. We know nothing about it.”

“We don’t need to wait until oil begins to flow. We already know, the oil revenue will become part of his personal ATM machine,” said Otunnu, who could be arrested when he returns to Uganda for failing to appear in court this week on sedition charges related to radio show comments made earlier this year.

He says the charges are a bid by Museveni to silence him.

Ugandan Minister for Information Kabakumba Matsiko said it was widely accepted that East Africa’s third largest economy has been blighted by corruption, but the Government has systems and institutions in place to combat it.

“Otunnu is entitled to his opinion. Unfortunately he’s blinded by his own hatred,” Matsiko said.

“This oil has always been there, but no previous government including the one in which Otunnu served ever thought about starting exploration.”

“The president has stated on several occasions that the oil money will not be used for recurrent expenditure but long-term infrastructure development in the health, transport and other sectors,” Matsiko said.

Museveni won power in 1986 and was credited with returning stability and economic vitality to Uganda, ravaged by dictatorship and civil wars in the 1970s and early 1980s. The country’s economy is seen growing between 7-8% in 2010/11 from 5.6% in 2009/10.

But donors and global civil society groups accuse Museveni of suppressing opposition and free speech, tightening his grip on power and failing to rein in rampant corruption.

International donors said this week that they would trim at least 10% off their $360m contribution to Uganda’s budget in the year to June 2011 because of concerns over corruption.

Opposition parties have refused to work with the electoral commission, because they say it is corrupt, but Otunnu said that does not mean there will be a boycott of the election.

He also said negotiations continue among leading opposition parties to form an Inter-Party Cooperation coalition to field a single candidate against Museveni.

“Everything is turned into this corrupt enterprise,” said Otunnu.

“We must make sure that there is change, there’s accountability, there’s transparency that this oil will be a blessing for the people of Uganda,” he said.

KENYAN agent of Somali terrorists has admitted carrying the bomb that killed 76 people

Writes Leo Odera Omolo

A Kenyan national who couriered the bombs used in the July 11 explosions that claimed 79 lives, booked into a hotel in Namasuba, a city suburb, months before the blasts.

Security sources yesterday said the Kenyan checked in on May 9 with the aid of Issa Luyima, a Ugandan national said to be the chief architect of the twin blasts.

Consequently, a joint team of anti-terror operatives raided the hotel on Thursday afternoon. Security sources yesterday intimated that the operatives had gathered more evidence to reinforce their case.

They seized vital documents and a counter book in which Luyima is said to have booked the Kenyan national into the hotel on that day.

“The seizure was useful, especially the counter book in which Luyima booked the Kenyan in his own hand writing,” the source said.

The source added that the evidence would reinforce the case against Luyima and his younger brother Haruna Hassan Luyima and other accomplices for their role in the blasts.

Sources said the terrorists could have picked on the hotel because it is secluded, giving them an assured from page one

of secrecy. It is not clear how many nights the Kenyan spent in the hotel but it is becoming increasingly clear that he checked into the hotel with the explosives before handing them over to other accomplices, a source said.

Security agents on Thursday paraded four suspects, the Luyima brothers, Edris Nsubuga and Mohamood Mugisha, in connection to the blasts.

There are 81 suspects in total, being held in connection with the attack linked to international terrorist cells of the Al-Qaeda and the Al-Shabaab.

Preparations were in high gear yesterday to have the four suspects arraigned with 14 others on charges of terrorism, sources said.

In a related development, three Kenyans charged two weeks ago over the bombs, have been removed from Luzira Prison and handed over to the Police for further investigations.

Hussein Hassan Agad, Mohamed Adan Abdow and Idris Magondu a.k.a Christopher were the first suspects to be charged. “I order the release of the three suspects into custody of the Police to enable them conclude their investigations,” Nakawa Chief Magistrate Deo Ssejjemba directed yesterday.

A letter signed by Joan Magezi, the senior principal attorney said the Police needed the suspects to identify exhibits. They face charges of murder, attempted murder, and terrorism and could face death if convicted.

Meanwhile the father of two the bomb suspects, Hajji Nondo Luyima, has said his children refused to go to school when they were young but had become prosperous businessmen.

Luyima said he did not know where Haruna Luyima and Isa Luyima got the money to become prominent in business until they were arrested over the bombs.
The two on Thursday asked Ugandans to forgive them for bombing world cup fans.

Their father said they had been living in Kenya where they claimed to have several businesses. The two were arrested by Kenyan authorities.

Luyima, a resident of Kawempe, said he has over 30 children.

“I failed to control those two when they were young.” Their elder sister, Sumaya Namigadde, said clan elders had queried the two brothers’ source of wealth. “They came home recently driving powerful vehicles and the clan members were concerned but they refused to explain.”

Suspects in custody
1.Abdul Karim Kato
2.Mariam Namaku
3.Isa Ali Senkumba
4.Peter Ntale
5.Fazila Namaku
6.Hussein Aliyowi Abdi
7.Andrew Obelai
8.Andrew Kanyoro
9.Muhammad Keche
10.Hassan Abdu Isaac
11.Echeku Vincent
12.Isaac Gedi Godana
13.Muzamiru Kawumbire
14.Gulfan Zameer
15.Ramula Nagudi
16.Inam Ul Haq
17.L/Cpl Koss Alfrred
18.Shakeel Ur Rehman Qureshi
19.Abdullahi Muhamod Ahmed
20.Waseem Afzal
21.Saidi Sulaiman
22.Muhammed Abdul Aziz
23.Abdul Aziz Ali Madope Aka
24.Ali- Ibrahim
25.Kaala Isaac
26.Inayatula Ullah
27.Muhammad Abdallah
28.Salat Ahmed Alasom
29.Omar Jimale
30.Bile Abdullah
31.Waris Mungayi
32.Kavuma Ibrahim
33.Kanyoro Andrew
34.Abushiri Yusuf Muhammed
35.Jairan Karim
36.Biraze Ku 2
37.Mubaraka Juma Dawa
38.Yunus Maganda
39.Obina Ismail
40.Medi Abdallah Saleh
41.Yusuf Balimuntale
42.Hassan Kasim Salah
43.Ahmed Hassan Barkhadle
44.Abdullahi Muhamoud Ismail
45.Muhamed Abdullahi
46.Bashir Abdul Khadir Medle
47.Abdullahi Omar Guleed alias Mutuyangu
48.Kasaya Patrick
49.Mulinde Robert
50.Fahdi Abdul Rahman
51.Muhammad Adam
52.Muhammod Musa Fara
53.Liban Muhammad Ali
54.Daudi Ibrahim Hassan
55.Abdi Hassan Ismail
56.Rihan Muhammad
57.Md Aka Muhammad Kasim
58.Ahmed Abdulah Muhammed
59.Ahmed Abdulah Muhammed
60.Magumba Abdul Hakim
61.Hassan Muhammad Abou
62.Jackson Omolo
63.Naufal Zamir Shiekh
64.Baturaine Christopher
65.Ali Yahya Hussein
66.Anthony Kiarie
67.Moses Mwenda Meme
68.Nangayi Keneth
69.Isaac Kibede
70.Manga Mubarak Salim
71.Muhammad Ahsan Raza
72.Abdallahi Hussein Ali

Ends

Uganda & Kenya: Police says terrorists are infiltrating Uganda via Kenya borders

Reports leo Odera Omolo In Kisumu City

INTERNATIONAL terror cells have been operating recruitment cells in eastern Uganda, investigators said yesterday.

Speaking to journalists at the Kampala Media Centre, Police boss Maj. Gen. Kale Kayihura said the cells stretched from Mable, Soroti, Kitgum to the Uganda-Sudan border.

Kayihura added that the terrorists were conscripting children and hawkers whom they hoodwink with big money.

So far 81 suspects, he said, had been arrested, 22 of whom will be charged with terrorism.
Eight suspects will be handed over to the immigration department, while 27, referred to as a special group, will be detained. Some 24 others will be released on Police bond, he said.

“The eight Pakistanis arrested preaching in Pallisa were initially in Kasese recruiting children and indoctrinating them in Madarasa (Koran schools). The next thing, they were in Pallisa without documents,” Kayihura said.

Intelligence says Ugandan, Kenyan, Tanzanian, Rwandan and Burudians are being trained jointly by the al-Qaeda and al-Shabaab in Mogadishu.
Kayihura said four bombs in suicide vests were smuggled into Uganda from Somalia, assembled locally and later used in the attacks. He said though the attacks were carried out by Ugandans, the planning was by al-Qaeda and al-Shabaab.

“The attacks were planned by terror cells of the al-Qaeda and the al-Shabaab and this was an international terrorist operation,” Kayihura said.

International terrorists sneaked into the country between April and May to plan the attacks and left after surveying the two scenes of the blasts––The Ethiopian Village Restaurant in Kabalagala and the Kyaddondo Rugby Club in Lugogo, he disclosed.

He said the initial plan was to have four suicide bombers but some of them developed cold feet and fled the country. “They left behind two suicide bombers and that is why they decided to use detonators.”

Present were Abas Byakagaba, the counter-terrorism boss, and Moses Sakira, the criminal investigations head.

“This success has been because of the joint effort of the various security agencies led by the Police,” Kayihura said.
He warned terrorists. “If they think they are safe anywhere in the world, they are mistaken. We are networked and we will catch them,” he said.

The bomb in Kabalagala, Kayihura said, was detonated by a Kenyan suicide bomber identified as Kaka Suli. One of the bombs at Lugogo was detonated by a Somali and the second by a Ugandan, Edris Nsubuga. The fourth bomb recovered from Ice Link Discotheque in Makindye, a day after the grisly blasts, failed to detonate because it mal-functioned, Kayihura added. “It failed to go off because of a technicality,” he stressed.

Initial reports had intimated that the suicide bomber could have developed cold feet.

Kayihura said some of the Ugandan suspects had fought alongside al-Shabaab in Mogadishu against AU forces, and that Luyima had been implicated in the November 2002 attempt to shoot down an Israeli Arkia plane in Mombasa.

Ends

Uganda: Al-Shabaab Somali terrorist trains more in Uganda as suspect bombers confesses

Writes Leo Odera Omolo In Kisumu City

FOUR key suspects who confessed to involvement in the bomb blasts were paraded before journalists yesterday.

TOP LEFT TO RIGHT: Idris Nsubuga, Mohamood Mugisha, Haruna Hassan Luyima and Issa Ahmed Luyima

Two of them, Edris Nsubuga and Haruna Hassan Luyima, cried over the pain their actions caused. Issa Luyima and Haruna Hassan Luyima are brothers, while Nsubuga is their friend. The fourth suspect was identified as Mohamood Mugisha.

“I am very sorry for the loss of life. I was hesitant to pick on Ugandans. My target was the Americans, who I think are responsible for the suffering in the world. I am very sorry to the people, who knew me,” Issa Luyima, described as the mastermind of the blasts, said without emotion.

“I am a peace-loving person but that is the nature of war. It has got many dimensions,” he asserted.

Nsubuga’s eyes welled with tears and his voice cracked as he spoke.
“I was used. Issa was so calculative in using me. To you all, I am a monster but I had emotional problems and this is what they capitalised on,” he said.

Handcuffed and dressed in jeans, T-shirts and jackets, the healthy-looking men aged between 24-33 years, narrated their role in the attacks, which killed 79 people, the Police said.

Ironically, Nsubuga’s auntie Margaret Nabankema, was also killed in the attack in Kyaddondo Rugby Club grounds in Lugogo, Kampala as revelers watched the World Cup final.

Haruna, who sobbed before the news conference began, and Mohamood Mugisha, said they were sorry for not reporting the crime.

They said they were not paid any money, except a reward in heaven.
The suspects were produced by the Chieftaincy of Military Intelligence boss, Brig. James Mugira.

They said they were speaking voluntarily. Mugira said this reflected how professional the probe had been.
Security, Mugira stressed, was on high alert, adding that another attack was “very unlikely”. “If people think that they can attack Ugandans and get away with it, they are wrong because we have the capacity to hunt them down,” he said.

“We promised the public that we would hunt down the perpetrators of this cowardly and barbaric act and bring them to justice,” Mugira stated. “We have kept our promise.”

The hunt for more accomplices was still on, according to Mugira. He was flanked by army spokesperson Felix Kulayigye.

“If your children are getting involved in such activities, getting radicalized, inform us immediately,” Mugira stated. He hailed Kenyan and other countries’ security agencies for assisting Uganda to arrest suspects.

Haruna Hassan Luyima, 27
He is a businessman based at Majestic Plaza in Kampala. Speaking in Luganda, he said he took the Kenyan suicide bomber to Kabalagala and a bomb to Makindye House in Kampala. On July 9, Issa Luyima called me and said he wanted to show me where I would put a bag he had showed me earlier. He came with Edrisa Nsubuga (the other suspect).

On July 10, he took me to his home in Namasuba and I met a Somali and a Kenyan. Issa showed me a bag that I was to take to Makindye House. On July 11, along with the Kenyan suicide bomber, we took a boda boda to Kabalagala.

The bomber proceeded to the Ethiopian Village Restaurant. I went with the other bomb to Makindye but I did not detonate it. I dumped it in a shrub and left.

Edrisa Nsubuga, 30, businessman at Pioneer Mall in Kampala and a Bachelor of Commerce student of Makerere University:
Speaking in English, he said he took the Somali bomber to Lugogo and detonated the second bomb and studied the scenes. On July 11, we took a boda boda to Lugogo. I put a laptop bag that contained one of the bombs on a stool under a table. When a scuffle ensued over a phone, we used the opportunity to get in. Before the Somali joined other revellers, he showed me his clock, which had the time 11:15pm when the bombs were to go off.

I got out and later, a blast went off. I used the phone I had to set off the second bomb. Asked why he did such a thing, he said: “I was unemployed. I was emotionally distressed. I had problems. A lot of misunderstandings with my wife.”

Issa Luyima, 33, the key suspect and “foot soldier” in al-Shabaab fought with the militants in Somalia.
He studied at Brilliant and Kawempe High School in Kawempe before working at Kampala International University.
Speaking in English, he said he recruited his brother (Haruna Hassan) as well as the Somali and Kenyan bombers and he examined the target places. My rage was against the Americans whom I deemed were responsible for all the sufferings of Muslims around the world. Our aim was to kill Americans.

I did not want to work with my brother but recruiting other people was very risky, so I manipulated him.

Mohammed Mugisha, 24
The man, who looks older, is alleged to have links with al-Shabaab. Speaking in Luganda, he said: “I joined al-Shabaab in 2008, they were coordinating with al-Qaeda. I was sent here to rent a house in which the bombs were to be planned. I got a house in Nakulabye (a city suburb).

However, when an al-Shabaab team inspected it, they did not like it because they saw soldiers nearby.
I went back to Kenya where I was reprimanded for the mistake as we could easily be arrested.

The order to kill was from Abu Zubair, the al-Shabaab boss in Somalia

Ends

Uganda: Boastful President Museveni revealed how he had toppled the late President Binaisa from power

Reports Leo Odera Omolo

PRESIDENT Yoweri Museveni deposed former president Godfrey Lukongwa Binaisa because he let political schemers manipulate his short-lived presidency, he told mourners yesterday.

BYE: Museveni laying a wreath on the casket bearing Binaisa’s remains at the burial in Nateete near Kampala yesterday

BYE: Museveni laying a wreath on the casket bearing Binaisa’s remains at the burial in Nateete near Kampala yesterday

BYE: Museveni laying a wreath on the casket bearing Binaisa’s remains at the burial in Nateete near Kampala yesterday

PRESIDENT Yoweri Museveni deposed former president Godfrey Lukongwa Binaisa because he let political schemers manipulate his short-lived presidency, he told mourners yesterday.

However, by the time Binaisa died, they had reconciled, the President added.

Speaking at Binaisa’s burial in Nateete, a Kampala suburb, Museveni also said he participated in the ouster of President Yusuf Kironde Lule over dishonesty.

Binaisa, 90, was buried at Mackay Church of Uganda next to his father’s grave. The former head of state died in his sleep at his home in Makindye on August 5. He received a 21-gun salute.

The Uganda Police pall-bearers handled the body as the Police band played dirges.

Museveni said he met Binaisa in the 1970s at Kilimanjaro Hotel when allied forces based in Tanzania were plotting to overthrow dictator Idi Amin. Binaisa impressed him as an articulate and humorous person, he noted.

“When we got here, we got problems with Lule because he forgot us. He said, ‘I am the President, forget all what we discussed in Moshi.’ I said, ‘whoever forgets people who help him to get where he is deserves a punishment.’ We toppled Lule. I took part in removing Lule because he did not follow what we agreed.”

Museveni recalled that during the search for Lule’s successor, he proposed Binaisa, who had to compete with Edward Rugumayo and the late Paulo Muwanga.

Because Muwanga scored a dismal three votes, his camp asked Rugumayo to withdraw from the race and Binaisa became president. He reigned between June 20, 1979 and May 12, 1980.

“Our group put Binaisa in power. Those who talk about Binaisa should know where he came from,” Museveni recounted.

He said the political problem of the day was treachery, dishonesty and lies, which, he said, still prevail. Months into power, the President recalled, Binaisa was convinced by conspirators to remove Museveni from the defence ministry because he was “a stumbling block”.

“Buli omu yali ali mu kibalo (everyone was scheming). DP and UPC were moving around with a calculator instead of seeking consensus and we move as a team. I wondered; ‘How could my friend who I brought sack me as minister on radio?’ That’s how I fell out with Binaisa,” Museveni explained.

“Our calculation was scientific. I decided we needed to get rid of Binaisa because he had become a problem,” Museveni stated.

The President said he met Binaisa in Libya and re-united with him. “When we came to power (in 1986), he was in the United States and we called him back,” Museveni said.

“I am very glad for the last ten years Binaisa was here (from exile). We have been interacting. I had forgotten that he sacked me. I am glad he died when we had reconciled and we are here to celebrate his life. May his soul rest in eternal peace.”

Speaking on behalf of the family, his daughter Nakalema Binaisa, thanked the NRM Government for the care extended to their father.

“We are proud to have had a brilliant, kind and huge personality as a parent. We are standing here to say, ‘thank you.”

She said the Government paid Binaisa’s medical bills and even supported him “during his Japan adventure”, a reference to his short-lived marriage to a Japanese woman, Tomoko Yamamoto

Binaisa is survived by six children.

At the burial were Prime Minister Prof. Apolo Nsibambi, Speaker Edward Sekandi and Police chief Kale Kayihura. Retired Archbishop Mpalanyi Nkoyooyo and Namirembe bishop Kityo Luwalira were also present.

Ends

Uganda: 3 brothers are in police custody in connection to the Kampala terrorist bomb attacks

Reports LeoOdera Omolo

THREE Ugandan brothers are among six fresh suspects netted in connection with the July 11 bombings in Kampala in which over 76 people perished and at least 50 were injured.

Among them is the mastermind of the twin suicide attacks identified as Issa Luyima. He was picked up from the Kenyan coastal town of Mombasa, where he fled on July 10, a day before the blasts.

“This is a turning point in the investigations. We now have the exact person behind the attacks,” a source said.

Luyima and the other suspects were flown to Uganda over the weekend after interrogation by Kenya’s anti-terror squad.

Sources said Luyima hired the two male suicide bombers and ferried them to the Kabalagala Ethiopian Village Restaurant and Lugogo grounds where they blew themselves up, killing and injuring dozens of revellers who were watching the final of the soccer World Cup.

The bombers were identified as Kenyan and Somali nationals. The third bomb at Ice Link Discotheque in Makindye, also a Kampala suburb, did not go off. A cell phone and a suicide vest were recovered from the bar.

Somalia’s al-Shabaab militants claimed responsibility for the blast, which they described as retaliatory for the presence of Ugandan peace-keepers in Somalia.
The Kenyan and Somali reportedly rented a three-room house in Paraa zone, Namasuba, a Kampala suburb, where they hatched the attack.

Luyima “coordinated” the plot and asked one of his brothers to detonate the bomb at Ice Link discotheque. However, the bomber developed cold feet when he saw the huge crowd of revellers at the bar.

“He said there were very many people and feared that a big number would die,” the source stated.

Investigators also said the bomb could not explode since the other phone attached to the device had not been turned into vibration mode.

The suspect later dumped the phone, which was to activate the bomb, into a pit-latrine in Namasuba, the investigators said. The phone and another believed to have set off the second bomb at Kyadondo have been recovered.

Luyima’s brothers have confessed to involvement in the attacks, but said it was his idea. Luyima’s livelihood is unknown.

Up until now, detectives believed the Kyadondo attack was carried out by a lone suicide bomber, but it has emerged that another person, also in custody, was in the crowd on the fateful day.
The man walked a few metres away before setting off the device using a cell phone.

The latest arrests brings the number of suspects to about 77. The detainees include Pakistanis, Somalis, a Yemeni national and Ugandans.

Three suspects, Idris Magondu, 42, Hussein Hassan Agade, 27, and Mohammed Aden Abdow, were a week ago charged with 89 offences which included terrorism, murder and attempted murder.

US foreign office on Thursday reported that 12 men accused of aiding the al- Shabaab are on the run. The Federal Bureau for Investigation has placed huge sums on their heads.

They are Abdikadir Ali Abdi, 19, Abdislan Hussein Ali, 21, Cabdulaaahi Ahmed Faraax, 33, Farah Mohamed Beledi, 26, and Abdiweli Yassin Isse, 26, all American citizens of Somali origin.

Others are Ahmed Ali Omar, 27, Khalid Mohammad Abshir, 27, Zakaria Maruf, 31, Mohammed Abdullahi Hassan, 22, and Mustapha Ali Salat, 20.

The 12 men plus two women Amina Farah Ali, 33, and Hawo Mohammed Hassan, 63, are accused of soliciting donations for al-Shabaab activities.

Ends

Ugandans working in diaspora contributed significantly to the GDP

Writes Leo Odera Omolo

SEEMINGLY, Ugandans working abroad are not only flying the country’s flag high, but they also contribute significantly to the economy back home.

In 2008, for example, Ugandans in the diaspora remitted about $723m back home, this represents about 5% of Uganda’s gross domestic product (GDP) ,which is a measure of the total value of goods and services produced in the country in a given year.

This figure is equivalent to 35% of the deposit base of all Ugandan banks as of March 2008 (figures computed from budget speech of 2008/2009).

When compared to Uganda’s budget for the fiscal year 2008/2009, this figure is equivalent to about 23% of the budget.

Or put another way, it is bigger than the largest allocation to any one sector in the country.

How does Uganda compare to her East African peers?

According to a World Bank report on development indicators (see below), Uganda’s $723m remittances come second to Kenya which bagged about $1.6b in 2008 from Kenyans in the diaspora, representing about 5.6% of its GDP.

Tanzanians abroad sent home $18m in 2008, which represented a paltry 0.09% of East Africa’s third biggest GDP.

On the other hand, Rwandans working outside their country, which is slated to grow by 6% this year, sent home nearly three times what Tanzanians did, at $67m. This accounted for 1.5% of their GDP.

The Burundians abroad sent home the smallest amount at $3.6m, which was 0.31% of their GDP.

Uganda’s large remittances, relative to Tanzania, Burundi and Rwanda, may be explained by the larger number of Ugandans living and working abroad, who migrated as refugees during the turbulent 70s and 80s and perhaps, more recently, as guards in Iraq and Afghanistan.

Ends

UGANDA GOVERNMENT AND THE FAMILY OF THE LATE PRESIDENT BINAISA CLASH OVER HS BURIAL SITE

Report Leo Odera Omolo

Leaders of the late Godfrey Binaisa’s clan have rejected the Government’s plans to bury him at Kololo independence grounds.

Mourners at the late Godfrey Binaisa’s home in Makindye, Kampala on Friday morning

Instead they want him buried at their ancestral home at Namusera along the Kampala-Hoima road.

They expressed fears that with the current rate of infrastructure development, the bodies at Kololo might be exhumed in future. They also fear that the managers of Kololo grounds might not take good care of the grave.

“The Government wants to bury him at Kololo but for us we want him to be buried in his ancestral home at Namusera,” William Kayondo, one of the executives of the Mpologoma clan told Saturday Vision at Binaisa’s home in Makindye. “Even Binaisa himself wanted to be buried at Namusera.”

Earlier, the Second Deputy Prime Minister, Henry Kajura told Saturday Vision that Binaisa would get a state burial at Kololo.

The body would lay in state at Parliament, where a motion to honour his service to the country would be debated.

By press time, a cabinet sub-committee headed by Kajura was meeting to finalise a detailed funeral programme. The committee includes representatives from Office of the President, information and national guidance, finance, internal affairs and health.

During a state funeral, the Government declares at least a day of mourning and flags fly at half mast

Ends

Uganda: 328 Days of the late Binaisa Presidency in nation remembered by many Ugandans

Reports Leo Odera Omolo IN kisumuCity

Although Godfrey Binaisa’s most memorable statement is “entebbe ewoma”, meaning “the seat is sweet”, he spent 328 days in power grappling with various problems.

Binaisa had to deal with commodity scarcity, an assassination attempt, rampant murders, in-fighting between groups that had defeated Idi Amin and an impoverished government.

His confidant, Israel Mayengo, recalls that even the money Binaisa used for escaping from Uganda was raised by friends. Despite these troubles, Binaisa remained a humourous president who always threw his comrades into laughter.

Mayengo said: “He often, jokingly, complained that whenever he met people they laughed at him. He then said people laughed because he was handsome and asked whether God made a mistake to give him the good looks,”

Mayengo served as a member of the National Consultative Council, the equivalent of Parliament at the time. He was appointed to the Council by Binaisa.

“He was so close to me that he shared with me most of his secrets and when he was escaping from Uganda, he used my car.”

Binaisa became President on June 20, 1979. He was appointed by the National Consultive Council.

He replaced Prof. Yusuf Lule who was dropped by the same council on the same day he was appointed.

Mayengo recalls that before Binaisa was appointed, the commission chaired by Edward Rugumayo sat at State House Entebbe to discuss a motion on a vote of no confidence against Lule.

The motion was tabled by Paul Wangola a member of the council.

“He gave seven reasons for tabling the motion. But I later learnt from Paul Muwanga that all of them were false. Muwanga was the person behind the motion,” Mayengo said.

Two of the seven reasons which Mayengo could still remember were that Lule had failed to look after the soldiers who had fought Amin and he had appointed ministers without consulting the commission.

The commission was the supreme governing body of the Uganda National Liberation Front (UNLF) a coalition of former Ugandan exiles who had fought Amin.

Out of 30 commission members, 16 supported the motion to oust Lule while 14 opposed it. Paul Kawanga Ssemwogerere and Andrew Lutakome Kayiira were among those who opposed the motion.

The opponents stormed out of the meeting but later returned and settled for a compromise; It was to be announced that Lule had voluntarily relinquished power. “Lule agreed but a few minutes later, he held an interview with a journalist from Radio Uganda who he told that he had been forced out of office,” Mayengo recalls.

Eager to tell the country what had happened; the journalist rushed back to Radio Uganda aired the comment from Lule, saying he had been forced out. This sparked off riots that welcomed Binaisa’s regime.

Meanwhile a popular freedom fighter, Nkombe Mpambara, was sent to Sheraton Hotel, where Binaisa had spent a night, to inform him that he was the new president.

Binaisa was sworn in as President at a low key event at Parliament as the riots gained momentum in parts of the city. Chief Justice Wako Wambuzi presided over the function.

The late Cardinal Nsubuga had been invited to the function but he refused, saying he was tired of the chaos in Government.

“The riots were contained when the Minister of Defense, Yoweri Museveni, made an announcement that however would be caught in the riots would face a severe punishment,” Mayengo said.

At one point, as the army tried to quell the rioters at city square (now constitutional square) in Kampala, soldiers fired at the crowd and a former Buganda prime minister, Paulo Kavuma, was hit.

When he came to power, people doubted whether Binaisa had full authority and wondered whether he was holding the seat for Milton Obote, who was in exile in Tanzania.

This prompted him to make the famous statement “Entebbe ewoma”. “He made that statement to show them that he could not simply relinquish power for Obote as if he was not enjoying it,” Mayengo recalls.

Although Mayengo does not talk about panda gaari (climb the truck) operations, scholars say they started during Binaisa’s regime. During such operations, people were rounded up at random and forced to climb onto military trucks and taken for screening.

It was a post-war period and many people had illegally acquired guns. Binaisa set up a monument at Namanve in memory of those killed during Amin’s regime. The monument was built to mark an end to the rampant murders in the Amin regime.

However, the morning after the monument had been unveiled, corpses were found littered next to it.

To try and fight insecurity, one day Binaisa told a lie that he had acquired a machine that could detect guns even from a distance.

Rumor circulated that if one had a gun in their house soldiers would be able to detect it even without searching the house.

Many people were afraid and surrendered their illegal guns.

During Binaisa’s regime there was a shortage of essential commodities like sugar, salt and soap. Mayengo recalls that Binaisa told citizens to not lose hope, promising that the scarce commodities were on their way.

Mayengo narrates that after a few months in office, Binaisa, Museveni and other government officials survived death while at Nile Hotel.

“Kayiira accused Binaisa of not giving him a ministry to head and yet he had one in Lule’s government.

He also accused Museveni of imprisoning his wife and children,” he said. Kayiira and a group of soldiers parked a fuel tank outside the hotel.

“They later shot at it. Their plan was for the tank to explode and kill whoever was inside the hotel,” he said. The Binaisa’s escaped but since then, Museveni and Kayiira became bitter rivals.

On May 12, 1980, when he was toppled, Binaisa had attempted to appoint the army Chief of Staff, Oyite Ojok as Uganda’s ambassador to Algeria. At the same time, Muwanga, the chairman of the little-known Military Commision, was being sent to Geneva as an ambassador.

Mayengo and Prof. Frederick Ssempebwa had warned Binaisa against firing Ojok and Muwanga hurriedly. They had advised him to use of an interim report to remove the two men who were a threat to the regime.

Unfortunately the report leaked.
“Binaisa wanted to consolidate his Presidency which he couldn’t because Ojok and Muwanga had established their own armies,” Mayengo said.

Ojok had accepted to take on his new office, but Muwanga advised him against it. “Muwanga asked Ojok whether he was a boy who could easily be pushed around. He then suggested that they topple Binaisa’ government,” Mayengo said.

Before Binaisa knew what was happening, soldiers stormed State House, forced him out and locked him in a small house at the old airport.

Muwanga’s Military Commission then took charge of the country. After months of being under house arrest, Binaisa escaped. “On Christmas Day he asked for permission to visit a relative at Kibuli.

The soldiers who went with him left him there hoping they to come back for him later. Binaisa dressed like a Muslim sheikh and sneaked out of the country.”

Unlike some other former Presidents who went into exile with lots of money, Mayengo said Binaisa went with nothing. Friends and relatives contributed money for him to escape and funded his stay abroad.

His presidency can be summed up as 328 days of headache, contrary to his popular quotes

ends

UGANDA IS MOURNING ITS FORMER PRESIDENT BINAISA WHO RULED FOR ONLY SIX MONTHS AND DIED AT 90 YEARS

Sent by Leo Odera Omolo

By Herbert Ssempogo and Joyce Namutebi

Former President Godfrey Lukongwa Binaisa has died.

The 90-year-old passed away in his sleep at his home in Kizungu Zone, a leafy, quiet area of Makindye, a suburb of Kampala.

He passed on between 3:00am and 6:00am yesterday, his nurse said. The man who led Uganda from June 20, 1979 to May 12, 1980, had diabetes.

Binaisa becomes the second former Ugandan president to die in the country. The other was Gen. Tito Okello Lutwa, who ruled from July 26, 1985 to January 26, 1986, when Predent Yoweri Museveni took over power.

Binaisa’s family, according to their lawyer Erias Lukwago, wants him buried at Kololo where two other decorated heroes, Prof. Yusuf Kironde Lule and Ignatius Musaazi, are buried. Lule was Binaisa’s predecessor and the first chairperson of the National Resistance Movement.

Musaazi founded the first national political party, the Uganda National Congress, in 1952.

Lukwago said he will move a motion in Parliament to have Binaisa buried in Kololo. “I have discussed the matter with the Speaker,” he said.

Issa Kimera, a nurse from Bedside Services, which cares for the elderly, said Binaisa had lately been happy. He went to bed at about 7:00pm after supper. “As a routine, I went to check on him at three in the morning. He lay in his bed face up,” Kimera recalled.

“Are you ok?” Binaisa, a lawyer, asked Kimera, who responded in the affirmative. “Where is my Nalongo?” he inquired in reference to Kimera’s colleague, Christine Naguddi, who took care of him in daytime.

Kimera informed Binaisa that Naguddi would report for duty later. The former head of state then went back to sleep. It was the last time he spoke to the nurse.

Kimera woke up at 6:00am, prayed and proceeded to Binaisa’s room. Something was wrong, he sensed.

“He lay in the same posture where I left him at 3:00am. I touched him. His right side was cold. There was no life. I called his daughter Nakalema and Dr. Mayanja.

Before he breathed his last, Naguddi disclosed, Binaisa’s condition was not good. It was why they had taken him to Dr. Mayanja’s Victoria Medical Centre in Kampala on Monday. He was scheduled for a second visit yesterday.

The body was transported i
n an ambulance to Mulago Hospital yesterday for a post-mortem examination.

“It is God’s decision. There is nothing we can do about it,” Nakalema, who fought back tears, said.

His niece, Hajati Sarah Bagalaaliwo, described Binaisa as “an honest, people person who worked for the nation diligently”.

Amos Lugolobi, a neighbour, remembered him as a good friend with whom he discussed development issues.

“He had too much information about Uganda. I hope someone cared to archive it somewhere because it was beneficial to the current generation,” Lugolobi told journalists.

The area defence secretary, Ibrahim Bageya, recollected that Binaisa once contributed sh500,000 to the tarmacking of a road in the area. He also paid two security guards’ salary for six months at sh40,000 per month each.

“He told us that being a president was stressful. He said managing the army was very hard,” Bageya recollected.

Binaisa idolised President Yoweri Museveni for managing the army, he said.

The Government said Binaisa died of cardiac arrest. A State funeral was being arranged, Fred Opolot, the head of the Media Centre, said in a statement yesterday.

At Parliament, deputy Speaker Rebecca Kadaga announced the death to the few MPs who attended the morning session.

“With regret, I inform you of the death of the former President of Uganda, Godfrey Lukongwa Binaisa,” she said.

“We passed a law on the death of past leaders. I trust the Government will get in touch with the family. For now, we observe a minute of silence in his honour,” Kadaga said as MPs rose to their feet and bowed their heads.

Outside the chambers, Prime Minister Prof. Apolo Nsibambi hailed Binaisa for leading the country at “the most difficult of times when the army was indisciplined”.

He said he did not wage war against the Government when he was deposed after he tried to shuffle the army.

“He was humble, sociable and gregarious,” Nsibambi remarked.
“When he left the highest office, he went to the UK and practised law. He was a Queens Counsel, the highest rank of law under the Commonwealth.

“He showed that when you occupy the highest office, when you leave, you can do something else.”

Several years after the death of his first wife, Binaisa in 2004 married a Japanese woman, Yamamoto. But the fairy-tale marriage collapsed in 2005. Binaisa is survived by six children, four of whom are based outside the country.

Late in the afternoon yesterday, Binaisa’s home was quiet except for the many senior Police officers who had camped there.

Among them were the Mobile Patrol Unit chief, Christopher Abache, the Kampala South boss, Moses Kafeero as well as the acting commissioner of traffic and road safety, Basil Mugisha.

At a glance
Born in 1920 to Canon Ananiya and Naome Binaisa

Studied at Makerere College School and Kings College Budo

Qualified as a lawyer in UK in 1955
Became a member of the bar at Lincoln’s Inn in 1956

Joined UNC, UCP and later UPC between 1955-1962

Named Uganda’s first Attorney General in 1962

Helped create the 1967 Constitution
Left government work and started a law firm in 1969

Went into exile in 1972, after Obote was overthrown by Amin

Worked as lawyer in London and US between 1972 and 1979

Returned to Uganda after Amin was overthrown in 1979

President of Uganda in June 1979

Lost the presidency in May 1980 after 11 months in the office

Went back in exile in the US until 2001 when he returned

Married Japanese woman, Yamamoto in 2004 and separated with her in 2005

Ends

Uganda: New aviation office opened by EAC at Entebbe

Writes Leo Odera Omolo

As the East African Community (EAC) common market gains momentum, efforts are underway to enhance aviation security standards to boost the industry and trade in the region.

To this effect, the EAC Civil Aviation Safety and Security Oversight Agency (CASSOA) has established offices at the Entebbe International Airport to serve as a focal point for the five states in the regional trading bloc.

Kategaya (right) launches the regional aviation headquarters as Nasasira cheers David Ssempijja

CASSOA is a specialised agency that ensures the development of a safe and secure civil aviation industry in the region.

“Efforts geared towards meeting aviation safety and security will make our airports and airspace safer.

“This will attract more airline operators into the region, hence a booming regional aviation industry,” said the EAC affairs minister Eriya Kategya.

He was launching the regional headquarters at Entebbe last week. He said East Africa had a challenge of meeting the standards of the International Civil Aviation Organisation.

“As you are aware, our region’s airspace is at times regarded as insecure, especially by the western world,” he said. John Nasasira, the transport minister, and regional aviation chiefs attended the function.

Ends