Tag: Muhoozi Kainerugaba

  • Uganda Army Chief Threatens Deportation of Voters Who Don’t Choose His Father

    Uganda Army Chief Threatens Deportation of Voters Who Don’t Choose His Father

    General Muhoozi Kainerugaba, Uganda’s Chief of Defence Forces and son of President Yoweri Museveni, has ignited a firestorm of controversy with threats to deport citizens who vote against his father in the upcoming January 2026 general election.

    In a series of inflammatory posts on X, Kainerugaba warned that those who fail to “support Mzee wholeheartedly” referring to Museveni, who has ruled Uganda since 1986 would be deemed “traitors” and face deportation.

    The remarks have drawn widespread condemnation, raising fears of escalating authoritarianism as the country braces for a contentious election.

    Kainerugaba, widely seen as being groomed to succeed his 80-year-old father, posted on Thursday, “We will deport all the traitors in public view!!”

    The threat was coupled with other provocative statements, including a decree banning women in the Ugandan People’s Defence Force (UPDF) from wearing trousers, insisting they march in skirts instead.

    “Trousers are for men not for women,” he wrote, adding that anyone forcing female soldiers to wear trousers would “have a very bad day.”

    The remarks come amid a mounting crackdown on opposition figures, with the election less than a year away.

    Opposition leader Robert Kyagulanyi, popularly known as Bobi Wine, condemned Kainerugaba’s statements as evidence of “how law and order has broken down in Uganda.”

    Bobi Wine
    Bobi Wine

    Wine, who plans to run for president again in 2026, has faced repeated harassment, including the recent abduction and alleged torture of his chief bodyguard, Eddie Mutwe, which Kainerugaba claimed responsibility for in earlier X posts.

    Mutwe, an activist with Wine’s National Unity Platform (NUP), was seized near Kampala on April 27, 2025, by armed men.

    Kainerugaba boasted on X that Mutwe was held in his “basement” and subjected to beatings, even alluding to further violence.

    Uganda’s justice minister later confirmed Mutwe showed signs of torture when he appeared in court, prompting the Uganda Human Rights Commission to issue a release order.

    The incident has fueled accusations that Museveni is using his son to suppress dissent.

    Kainerugaba’s deportation threat has raised alarm both domestically and internationally.

    Kainerugaba’s history of incendiary social media posts has repeatedly stirred controversy.

    In January 2025, he threatened to behead Bobi Wine, and in 2022, he prompted a diplomatic spat by threatening to invade Kenya, forcing President Museveni to issue an apology.

    The deportation threat has also sparked confusion, as Uganda lacks a clear policy for deporting its own citizens.

    As the 2026 election approaches, the spotlight is on Museveni’s government to ensure a free and fair process.

    Bobi Wine, speaking at a press conference in Nairobi, criticized Western nations for their muted response to Uganda’s “gross human rights violations” and vowed to continue his campaign despite the risks. “If I am still alive and not in jail, I will run,” he said.

    For now, Kainerugaba’s threats have cast a shadow over Uganda’s democratic prospects, with many fearing that the military’s influence will only grow.

  • Ugandan General Returns To X To ‘Shake Up The World’

    Ugandan General Returns To X To ‘Shake Up The World’

    General Muhoozi Kainerugaba, the son of Uganda’s President Yoweri Museveni, has reactivated his X account barely a week after he quit the social media platform, citing renewed focus on his military duties.

    “I’m back!” Gen Kainerugaba posted on his verified account @mkainerugaba that has quickly amassed hundreds of followers.

    He came back in his characteristic style with a series of controversial posts, threatening to “shake up this world!”.

    The 50-year-old army general has become increasingly involved in the political arena, in breach of military protocol, reigniting debates about his ambitions to succeed his father, who has been in power since 1986.

    Critics have taken a swipe at the general over the statements he has made on social media, which touched on subjects considered taboo for a serving soldier.

    He recently sparked anger with a tweet in which he threatened to behead the country’s leading opposition figure, Bobi Wine.

    Announcing his return on the micro-blogging platform on Thursday, Gen Kainerugaba ordered Uganda’s security agencies to arrest on the spot any opposition figure found wearing anything that resembles the country’s military uniform.

    “And those who do not respect this order…have their own problems,” added the general, who heads Uganda’s land forces.

    He also threatened to deport an unnamed US diplomat, citing his reported failure to “salute” the general.

    “My only problem is the US Defense Attachè. If I find him anywhere…and he doesn’t stand up and salute me… I will arrest him on the spot!!

    The general also wondered what the BBC “said about me”, referring to the corporation’s reporting of his announcement to quit X last week.

    This is the second time Gen Kainerugaba has quit and then returned to the social media platform in three years.

    He first left in 2022 but returned days later and continued his social media outburst, which have previously sparked diplomatic tensions.

    In October that year, he made headlines after he posted a series of tweets threatening to invade neighbouring Kenya, a comment that forced his father to step in and apologise.

    Gen Kainerugaba’s recent post threatening to “cut off” the head of Bobi Wine, whose real name is Robert Kyagulanyi, drew widespread condemnation in the country.

    Although the general apologised about the post which he described as a joke, Bobi Wine said he could not take such threats lightly.

    The Ugandan government downplayed the post, with a spokesperson describing Gen Kainerugaba’s social media statements as “casual” remarks that should not be interpreted as reflecting official policy.

    Gen Kainerugaba is widely believed to be the heir apparent to his father, who has governed Uganda since 1986, although Museveni has denied that he is grooming him for the presidency.

    His X account currently has more than 1,000 followers. The old account had amassed over a million followers.

    In his return message, he urged his supporters to follow him back.

    “I want all my people back. Bring them all back!”

  • Ugandan President Museveni’s Son Ends 2026 Election Bid

    Ugandan President Museveni’s Son Ends 2026 Election Bid

    The son of Uganda’s long-serving leader Yoweri Museveni said on Saturday he had abandoned plans to run for presidency at the next election in 2026, urging his supporters to endorse his father instead.

    President Museveni, who has led the country for 38 years, is widely expected to run for re-election even though he has not yet confirmed his candidacy.

    “I would like to announce that I will not be on the ballot paper in 2026,” said Muhoozi Kainerugaba in a post on social media platform X, formerly Twitter.

    “I fully endorse President Yoweri Museveni in the next elections,” he said, urging his supporters to back his father for a seventh term.

    Kainerugaba, currently the head of the country’s military, is widely expected to eventually become his father’s chosen successor but is also known for making controversial comments. Museveni apologised to Kenya in 2022 after his son threatened on Twitter to invade the neighbouring country.

    Uganda’s opposition has long accused Museveni of seeking to impose a monarchy on Uganda — a claim the president denies.

    Museveni, 80, has ruled Uganda since 1986 and has changed the constitution twice to extend his rule.

    Human rights activists and his political opponents including pop star turned politician Bobi Wine have long accused Museveni of using security forces to jail, intimidate or torture opposition supporters. Museveni denies such accusations.

    Wine came second in the last presidential election in 2021. He rejected the results, alleging ballot stuffing, intimidation and abductions of his supporters.

    Museveni called it Uganda’s fairest-ever vote.

  • Uganda: The Muhoozi Project Is A Hoax

    Uganda: The Muhoozi Project Is A Hoax

    By Andrew Karamagi

    After some contemplation and observation, I have come to the conclusion that the MK Project (a hodgepodge ensemble that aspires to install so called First Son, Muhoozi Kainerugaba, as successor to Yoweri Museveni) is a hoax and major diversion, orchestrated by the latter, with the former as an excited spoilt kid, buoyed by a brazen cast of unsophisticated fortune hunters, brazen wheeler dealers, ignorant sycophants, and callous felons.

    My three brief reasons:

    First, I hold the view that Museveni quietly but thoroughly despises Muhoozi for his lack of discipline, rigour, and intellectual depth. He doesn’t see him as a guarantor of the family’s bloodline and loot.

    Why do I think so? In my conversations with elders and bush war veterans, they have invariably underscored Museveni’s sheer determination, willpower, thirst for knowledge (even for nefarious motives), and spartan discipline (including his disdain for alcohol and penchant for physical fitness), all of which were part of his formative youthful years. When Museveni was Kainerugaba’s age, he was already considerably published on Marxist philosophy, Pan Africanism, public policy, guerrilla warfare, and politics as a whole. It is a different question whether he has lived up to his writings, but the same cannot be said, even remotely, of his son who can neither compose nor deliver a simple speech at a wedding ceremony, his own birthday party, or a public rally, off-the-cuff. Instead, Kainerugaba relies on what appears to be hastily scribbled, incoherent notes on sticky notes or shabby pieces of paper.

    Now in his eighties, the Old Man has evidently lost his shine and verve, but remains a polar opposite of his wayward son in terms of mental acuity and discipline. It doesn’t make sense to me that Museveni would take the gamble of entrusting his life’s work to a lazy, self-absorbed kid born with a silver spoon in his mouth.

    Second, Museveni’s pathological love for power, in its rawest and finest forms, makes it impossible for him to tolerate, much less support the notion of a successor. In his kingdom Uganda, there is no trinity or line of succession. He is the alpha and omega, the beginning and the end.

    Take a look at the fates of all those who were once thought to be potential replacements (many of whom he even cunningly whispered the idea of succession to), from James Wapakhabulo, Noble Mayombo, Amama Mbabazi, Gilbert Bukenya (don’t laugh!), to Rebecca Kadaga. Don’t let the father-son relationship mislead you; in Machiavellian equations of power, being his biological son doesn’t mean much to a despot.

    As with the rest of animal kingdom, so with humankind…lions, for example, are known to kill off young male offspring to guarantee their continued leadership of the pride. By the same logic, regardless of his state-of-mind, for as long as Museveni has the basic functions of body temperature, pulse rate, and respiration, it is not conceivable that he can entertain the idea of a replacement or successor, by whatever name called. It’s just not in him.

    Gen Muhoozi is the son of President Yoweri Museveni.

    Third and finally, Gen. Museveni’s career as a civil servant (i.e., intelligence operative and minister), guerrilla, and head of the ruling junta (so called NRM) has been characterised by countless smokescreens. Museveni trivialises or remains silent about serious issues and overplays the things he doesn’t really care about.

    (In)famous diversions include the ruse he sold regarding his commitment to cease fire and fully participate in the Nairobi Peace Talks (also known as the Nairobi Peace Jokes) yet his rebel forces were simultaneously advancing on (and later on captured) Kampala; his perennial mind games on the leadership of religions and kingdoms in Uganda; and the false alliance he made with MPs who zealously supported his bid for the removal of the presidential age limit, only for him to sacrifice them at the altar of the 2021 elections to appease an angry population.

    In the words of my friend Betty Nambooze, “if Museveni asks you to wait for him on the road that leads to Masaka, do yourself a favour and instead wait for him on the road that leads to Jinja.” Founding father Milton Obote who was his boss at a time designated him “a pathological liar who only tells the truth by accident.” One commentator whose name eludes me once hilariously quipped that if you shake hands with Museveni, check to see that you still have all five fingers. Against such a backdrop, why would anyone believe that for something as crucial as transition or succession, Museveni would play his cards so openly as to show us his heir apparent?

    Let me conclude this way:

    The only real utility that the MK Project possesses for Museveni is twofold:

    i. By deliberately hyping up a Kainerugaba presidency, Museveni forces the public to look favourably upon his continued rule because he is the Devil we know…and that Muhoozi would certainly be an unmitigated disaster. This reduces the spotlight on his forty-year-reign, as the “bewildered herd” gets distracted by the theatrics of the MK project.

    ii. Assuming that a real crown prince exists, the MK Project helps the ruling family to conceal the identity of that person, while we chase after shadows.

    In the end, the Ugandan public will be the ultimate loser in this long con. After all, Baalam Barugahara & Co., don’t care who takes power next or what happens to the country, as long as their stomachs are full.

    For these reasons, I hold the considered view that the MK Project is the latest in a series of hoaxes, not worth the undivided attention of Ugandans.

    Let’s focus on getting rid of Museveni and Musevenism—and the task of restoring our society to its past glory and dignity.

    Opinion is writer’s own.

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