Tag: President Museveni

  • Winnie Byanyima, Besigye’s Wife, Reflects on Her Past Relationship with Museveni Amid Her Husband’s Current Trial

    Winnie Byanyima, Besigye’s Wife, Reflects on Her Past Relationship with Museveni Amid Her Husband’s Current Trial

    Winnie Byanyima, the wife of beleaguered Uganda’s foremost opposition figure Kizza Besigye has denied that her past relationship with President Yoweri Museveni has anything to do with Besigye’s current trial.

    Winnie, a Ugandan aeronautical engineer, politician, human rights activist, feminist and diplomat is the executive director of UNAIDS. In an interview with Uganda’s Next Gen Radio, she talked about her past love relationship with Museveni, who has shown no remorse over Besigye’s incarceration.

    “Yes. A long time ago I had a relationship with Museveni but it has no relevance now. It was a normal relationship with President Museveni,” she said.

    Winnie Byanyima, the wife of beleaguered Uganda’s foremost opposition figure Kizza Besigye has denied that her past relationship with President Yoweri Museveni has anything to do with Besigye’s current trial.

    Winnie, a Ugandan aeronautical engineer, politician, human rights activist, feminist and diplomat is the executive director of UNAIDS. In an interview with Uganda’s Next Gen Radio, she talked about her past love relationship with Museveni, who has shown no remorse over Besigye’s incarceration.

    “Yes. A long time ago I had a relationship with Museveni but it has no relevance now. It was a normal relationship with President Museveni. It had some challenges, and I left it, but it is not relevant to the political discussion,” she said.

    The talk about the past relationship between Winnie and Museveni emerged on online social media platforms, with many users arguing that the Ugandan president is entertaining the suffering of Besigye because he is jilted.

    Winnie’s relationship with Museveni has constantly come out during Uganda’s political contests. In 2006, one of the UK’s leading newspapers, The Telegraph, in an article titled, “Tangled tale of love and betrayal that links bitter rivals,” wrote about how the relationship could have found itself in succession politics.

    It describes Winnie as a headstrong and elegant woman who conducted a long affair with Museveni in the 1980s before marrying his leading critic.

    Comrades in arms

    During those days, Museveni and Besigye were not always such bitter adversaries. They were comrades in arms during Uganda’s brutal bush war of the 1980s and were so close that Besigye served as Museveni’s doctor.

    So most of Uganda’s past elections have seen two former friends standing against one another, while the first lady of the opposition is a former lover of the sitting president.

    Security officers wheel in opposition leader Dr Kizza Besigye outside the Nakawa Chief Magistrate’s Court in Kampala on February 21, 2025. (Photo: Isano Francis)

    The link has added a personal and very bitter twist in the current trials of Besygye who is in jail over allegations of attempting to overthrow the government.

    Besigye and Byanyima in the past during happy times.

    The couple conducted their affair between 1981 and 1986 when Museveni was fighting a guerrilla war against the late tyrant Milton Obote. Byanyima was at his side when he marched into Kampala at the head of a rebel army and made himself president in 1986.

    But Museveni was unwilling to leave his wife, Janet, and Byanyima was cast out. She eventually married Besigye in 1998 – just as he fell out with the president and became his leading critic.

    On Friday, Besigye was charged with treason in a civilian court after his controversial case was transferred from a military tribunal.

    Treason is a capital offence in Uganda and if found guilty the 68-year-old could be sentenced to death. He was charged alongside two other suspects, but they did not enter a plea because the charges against them could only be heard in a higher court.

    Abducted in Kenya

    Besigye, who has run for president against Museveni four times, has been in detention since he was dramatically abducted in Kenya in November and taken back to Uganda to face a military trial.

    But a landmark ruling by the Supreme Court last month said that trying civilians in military courts was unconstitutional and ordered all such cases to be transferred.

    The move angered President Museveni, who called it “a wrong decision”. At the start of last week, Besigye had begun a hunger strike over his continued detention.

    The charges stem from accusations that he was plotting to remove Museveni from power by force. Friday was the first first time Besigye had appeared before a civilian court for formal charges, after the Supreme Court ruling.

    Visibly frail, he was wheeled before the Nakawa magistrate court in the capital, Kampala, alongside his aide and co-accused Obeid Lutale.

    According to the charge sheet presented before the court, Besigye is accused of holding meetings in Switzerland, Greece and Kenya between 2023 and November last year in a plot to overturn the government.

    He was also accused of soliciting military, financial and other logistical support to topple Museveni’s government.

  • Museveni Pledges To Continue Using Military Courts Despite Ban

    Museveni Pledges To Continue Using Military Courts Despite Ban

    Uganda’s President Yoweri Museveni said on Saturday his government would continue to prosecute civilians in military tribunals even after the country’s top court banned the practice, ruling it unconstitutional.

    In a majority decision on Friday, the east African country’s Supreme Court banned prosecutions of civilians in military courts and ordered all ongoing cases there to be transferred to civil courts.

    The ruling was hailed by key opposition figure Kizza Besigye’s lawyer as offering him some relief during an ongoing trial by the country’s general court martial.

    In a statement to the media on Saturday, Museveni described the court’s decision as wrong and said military prosecutions reinforce the civil courts and had helped in pacifying Karamoja, a region in Uganda’s northeast plagued by armed violence.

    “The country is not governed by the judges,” he said. “The military courts helped us to discipline Karamoja. We cannot and will not abandon this useful instrument for stability.”

    Human rights activists and opposition politicians have long accused Museveni’s government of using military courts to prosecute opposition leaders and supporters on politically motivated charges.

    While civilian court judges are independent, military court officials are appointed by the president.

    Ugandan pop star turned opposition leader Bobi Wine has previously been prose in a military court over weapons offences.

    Besigye, a longtime opponent of Museveni, was detained in neighbouring Kenya in November and brought back to Uganda to be charged with several weapons and security offences in the general court martial.

    He has been held in detention since and was due to reappear in court on Monday, but his lawyers said after the ruling on Friday that he now would not do so.

    In power since 1986, Museveni has not openly stated whether he would seek re-election at the polls next year although he is widely expected to do so.

  • Museveni’s Car Stolen By Kenyans Found In Gilgil By Flying Squad With A South Sudanese Number Plate

    Museveni’s Car Stolen By Kenyans Found In Gilgil By Flying Squad With A South Sudanese Number Plate

    Fying squad have recovered and returned President Museveni’s car that was stolen seven months ago by Kenyans.

    Museveni had contacted Uhuru informing him about his Black Toyota Kluger that was stolen from his fleet in November.

    Investigators of this site have been informed that Uhuru Kenyatta was forced to dispatch the flying squads after ordinary Police failed to ensure that the car is recovered.

    The Kenyan flying squad took the matter traced the car and found it in Gilgil. Flying squad trailed the carjackers for weeks and laid a trap at the Gilgil weighing bridge.

    Also read: Nairobi Woman Confesses How She Steals From Her Husband When He Gets Home Late and Drunk

    But someone from the public or their deep informers in the forces tipped the suspected car thieves that they were being trailed. They packed the car few meters before the weighing Bridge and vanished without leaving any trace of evidence in and on the vehicle.

    The car was recovered with South Sudanese Number Plates; SSD 598M.

    The vehicle currently at Nairobi flying squad offices, underwent further investigation and comparison of the chases and the numbers.

    The dusting of the vehicle didn’t reveal any traces of finger prints. Meaning those who have been using the car for months now are deep in the web of carjacking mastermind.

    The car was verified and chases matched with the documents and Kenya flying squad Commander handed over the vehicle to a team that had been sent by Museveni.

    Uganda’s Presidential Press Secretary, Don Wanyama thanked Kenyan Flying Squad officer, John Njoroge through official post on Museveni’s social media sites.

    One of Museveni’s site that Wanyama handle posted “Our machine is back, it has been a long chase, 8 months to be exact,”

    This is not the first time these inter border car thieves are hitting the lime light. In September 2014, President Uhuru Kenyatta lost his chase car, a BMW.

    The BMW had it’s tracking system vandalized and the vehicle transported to Uganda for a black market trade in.

    It took the intervention of Museveni and Uganda Police forces with help of their Kenyan Cyber-crime CID department to recover the BMW.

    Mid August last year, a Black V8 was also stolen from Kenya’s State House. The V8 was stolen from Uhuru Kenyatta’s Presidential convoy fleets.

    Flying squad traced the car intercepted it at Boma N’gombe, Kilimanjaro with the help of Tanzania Police.

    The Black V8 original plates ~KCP 184R, had been replaced with fake plates bearing the number T954 DEQ.

    These State carjackers seem to be enjoying a blanket of cover from State personnel and some getting advised about every safety measure they should take to avoid arrest or being identified by the Police.