Tag: Uganda

  • Museveni Calls Besigye’s Hunger Strike ‘Unprincipled Blackmail’

    Museveni Calls Besigye’s Hunger Strike ‘Unprincipled Blackmail’

    Ugandan President Yoweri Museveni has criticized opposition figure Kizza Besigye’s hunger strike, describing it as an ‘unprincipled blackmail.’

    Museveni in a statement Tuesday addressed concerns surrounding the detained opposition leader’s health, emphasizing that the government has ensured adequate medical care.

    He asserted that the opposition leader has access to government medical facilities in prison and has also been attended to by his personal doctors at private clinics.

    “If there was need for any additional medical care, the Government would be advised. However, in this case, Dr. Besigye was on hunger strike,” read his statement in part.

    “That is part of the cause for his weakness that we could see in the pictures that were in the newspapers. Is that not unprincipled blackmail?”

    The Ugandan leader questioned Besigye’s use of a hunger strike as a means to gain public sympathy and push for bail, rather than seeking a quick trial to address the charges against him.

    Museveni also sought to reframe the public discourse, urging Ugandans to focus on why Besigye was arrested rather than his detention conditions.

    Besigye, a longtime critic of the Museveni administration and a former presidential candidate, was arrested in Nairobi’s Riverside area last year on allegations of planning to jeopardize Uganda’s security infrastructure.

    He would later be charged in a military court with illegal possession of a firearm, threatening national security, as well as treachery, which carries the death sentence. He denies the accusations.

    His supporters have called for his immediate release, citing concerns over his health and the political nature of the charges against him.

    Besigye’s arrest and hunger strike have sparked a renewed debate over political freedoms in Uganda, with human rights groups calling for due process and fair treatment in his trial.

    The opposition has accused the government of using unconstitutional tactics to suppress dissent, a claim the authorities have denied.

    Museveni’s remarks come on the back of calls for his unconditional release from the international community including a statement by human right defenders among them Amnesty International.

  • Ugandan Government Offers to Drop Military Trial of Kizza Besigye

    Ugandan Government Offers to Drop Military Trial of Kizza Besigye

    Uganda’s government has offered to drop the military trial of opposition leaderKizza Besigye, who has been on a hunger strike since February 10 in protest of his detention.

    The 68-year-old Besigye, a former ally of President Yoweri Museveni, is facing treason charges for allegedly threatening “national security.”

    Despite the Supreme Court ruling that civilians should not be tried in military courts, the government had initially planned to proceed with a court martial.

    However, on Sunday, February 16, 2025, cabinet spokesman Chris Baryomunsi announced that the government would transfer Besigye’s case to a civil court under the court’s ruling.

    Baryomunsi, who visited Besigye in prison alongside his doctors, urged him to end his hunger strike while the transfer is processed.

    The army, which had previously ignored the Supreme Court ruling, has yet to comment on the development.

    Besigye’s health has raised alarm, with his wife, Winnie Byanyima, expressing deep concern for his condition.

    Besigye was seen in court on Thursday looking frail, prompting calls from international organisations for the protection of political opposition in Uganda ahead of the 2026 elections.

    Amnesty International condemned the trial as a “travesty of justice” and highlighted the increasing repression of political figures in the country.

  • Ebola Outbreak Confirmed In Uganda, One Dead

    Ebola Outbreak Confirmed In Uganda, One Dead

    Uganda has confirmed an outbreak of the Ebola virus in the capital Kampala with the first confirmed patient dying from it on Wednesday, the health ministry said on Thursday.

    It is the East African country’s ninth outbreak since it recorded its first infection of the viral disease in 2000.

    The patient, a male nurse at the Mulago National Referral Hospital in Kampala, had initially sought treatment at various facilities, including Mulago, as well as with a traditional healer, after developing fever-like symptoms.

    “The patient experienced multi-organ failure and succumbed to the illness at Mulago National Referral Hospital on Jan. 29. Post-mortem samples confirmed the Sudan Ebola Virus Disease (strain),” the ministry said in a statement.

    Forty-four contacts of the deceased man have been listed for tracing, including 30 health workers, the ministry said.

    However, contact tracing could be challenging as Kampala, where the latest Ebola infection cropped up, is a crowded city of over 4 million people and a crossroads for traffic to South Sudan, Congo, Rwanda and other countries.

    The highly infectious hemorrhagic fever is transmitted through contact with infected bodily fluids and tissue. Symptoms include headache, vomiting of blood, muscle pains and bleeding.

    Ugandan authorities have used capacity built up over years, such as laboratory testing, patient care know-how, contact tracing and other skills, to bring recent Ebola outbreaks under control in relatively short order.

    Uganda last suffered an outbreak in late 2022 and that was declared over on Jan. 11, 2023 after nearly four months in which it struggled to contain the viral infection.

    The last outbreak killed 55 of the 143 people infected and the dead included six health workers.

    The patient had also sought treatment at a public hospital in Mbale, 240 km (150 miles) east of Kampala near the border with Kenya, the ministry said.

    Vaccination against Ebola for all contacts of the deceased will begin immediately, the ministry said. There is currently no approved vaccine for the Sudan strain of Ebola, though Uganda received some trial vaccine doses during the last outbreak.

    An outbreak of Marburg, a cousin of Ebola, was declared in neighbouring Tanzania last week. Uganda also borders Rwanda, which has just emerged from a Marburg outbreak, and Congo where outbreaks of Ebola are common.
    (Reuters)
  • 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!”

  • How Ugandan Spy Agency Trailed Besigye From Entebe Airport To His Abduction In Nairobi

    How Ugandan Spy Agency Trailed Besigye From Entebe Airport To His Abduction In Nairobi

    (BBC) – The mysterious detention of Uganda’s opposition leader Kizza Besigye while on a visit to Kenya nearly two weeks ago has sparked widespread condemnation and fears of a clandestine exchange of intelligence between the two neighbours.

    Besigye’s allies and wife have come out to reveal harrowing details of how the opposition chief was apparently lured to meet his abductors, said to have disguised themselves as Kenyan security agents.

    Reports say he was spied on from the time he boarded a plane at Entebbe airport in Uganda for Kenya’s capital, Nairobi, where he was picked up, before somehow being transferred to a military court back home without any extradition proceedings.

    While Kenya insists it played no role and is investigating the incident, Uganda holds that Kenya was fully aware of the plan, citing intelligence correspondence aimed at tracking Besigye down.

    As he returns to military court in Kampala, we piece together what we know so far.

    Who is Kizza Besigye?

    Besigye has contested and lost four presidential elections against President Yoweri Museveni, who has been in power since 1986.

    He has been less active in politics recently, and did not contest the 2021 election.

    But earlier this year, he formed a new party, the People’s Front for Freedom (PFF) after breaking away from the Forum for Democratic Change (FDC), which he founded two decades ago.

    The opposition politician has for years travelled to Kenya and moved freely, sometimes to attend high-profile events – even while he remained Museveni’s main challenger and biggest critic.

    What led up to Besigye’s disappearance?

    This time, Besigye travelled to Nairobi to attend the launch of a book by Kenyan opposition politician Martha Karua.

    The 68-year-old landed in the city on the morning of 16 November and took a taxi to his hotel in the affluent suburb of Hurlingham. He was accompanied by long-term ally Hajj Obeid Lutale.

    A few hours later, he left the hotel, boarded a taxi and headed to Riverside Drive, some 5km (three miles) from his hotel, for a private meeting, according to his political allies.

    This was the last time he was seen until he re-emerged in Uganda four days later.

    His taxi driver said he waited for the veteran politician for more than 12 hours, before deciding to leave when he was unable to phone him.

    Besigye’s team in Uganda started relaying distress calls after their leader’s mobile phones went unanswered.

    His disappearance hit the headlines and raised eyebrows in the region, with his wife Winnie Byanyima, the head of the UN’s organisation to tackle HIV and Aids, taking to social media to report that her husband had been “kidnapped” in Nairobi.

    The next day, his reserved seat at the book launch, where he was expected to be the guest speaker, remained empty with organisers raising the alarm about his absence.

    How was Besigye picked up?

    Besigye and his friend Lutale arrived at the apartment along Riverside Drive where he was due to meet an unidentified Ugandan national and another unknown British national, according to Ms Byanyima.

    The British national supposedly wanted to introduce Besigye to a group of colleagues and businessmen, who had expressed an interest in financially backing the PFF, she said.

    In the room there was a box of what appeared to be a stash of money. One of the hosts had two guns.

    Shortly after a brief introduction, eight men in plain clothes who said they were Kenyan police officers knocked on the door and told Besigye and his associate they were under arrest, Ms Byanyima told Kenya’s Citizen TV.

    The opposition chief tried to explain he had nothing to do with the items in the room, but the security agents did not listen.

    Four of the men bundled Besigye and Lutale into a car with Kenyan number plates and drove them under the cover of night towards the border with Uganda.

    “It was clearly an operation well planned,” Ms Byanyima added.

    Before crossing over to Uganda, the four men switched from speaking Swahili and started talking in the Ugandan languages, Luganda and Runyankole.

    The two held captive were ferried to Uganda without their belongings, including their passports, which were later picked up by Besigye’s party officials from the Nairobi hotel.

    PFF spokesperson Ibrahim Ssemujju Nganda told Uganda’s Monitor newspaper that Besigye and his friend went through the Malaba border post without stopping for routine security checks.

    “They only changed vehicles. The four-wheel drive vehicle with the Kenyan number plate was left at the Malaba border post and moved to another vehicle with [a] Ugandan number plate,” he said.

    Why was Besigye picked up in Nairobi and was he set up?

    Uganda’s Information Minister Chris Baryomunsi said detectives had gathered enough intelligence to arrest Besigye while in Nairobi.

    He said the Kenyan authorities had enabled the cross-border operation, even though officials in Nairobi insist they knew nothing about it.

    Besigye is now being tried in Kampala and not Nairobi because the crime that was planned was “against Uganda and not Kenya”, Ugandan army spokesman Brig Gen Felix Kulayigye told the BBC’s Africa Daily podcast.

    “We have a legal framework with our counterparts in Kenya to deal with matters that threaten regional security,” he added.

    However, he did not explain why there was no extradition process.

    Reports indicate that Besigye’s arrest had been planned for months and was executed with the help of some people who were close to him.

    Organisers of the meeting are said to be a British national and a senior official of the Ugandan army, both of whom were well known to Besigye, Ugandan media reported.

    His wife alleged the British national who was in the meeting was a “paid operative who tried to plant guns” on Besigye.

    Why is Besigye facing a military court?

    Over the decades, hundreds of civilians have been tried in Uganda’s military courts, even though the Constitutional Court has ruled against the practice.

    Besigye, who is no stranger to appearing in military courts, is back there because he subjected himself to military law, Brig Kulayigye told the BBC.

    Last week, he and his co-accused were arraigned at the Makindye military court after being held incommunicado for four days.

    They are facing four charges which include being found with two pistols and ammunition, and seeking to buy weapons from foreigners in the Swiss city of Geneva, the Greek capital, Athens, and Nairobi.

    The two denied all charges.

    Besigye objected to being tried by a court martial, saying that if there were any charges against him, he should be tried in a civilian court.

    His lawyers also argued that the alleged offences were committed outside Uganda and therefore they were arraigned in the court martial illegally.

    But the court overruled the lawyers and allowed the hearing to continue.

    The accused were remanded at Luzira maximum prison until 2 December.

    Agather Atuhaire, a Ugandan lawyer and a human rights activist, told the BBC that Kenya should have arrested Besigye and extradited him to Uganda following the laws that govern the process.

    Ms Byanyima said she did not expect her husband to get justice.

    But Brig Kulayigye said the court martial “is not a kangaroo court”.

    “Justice will be served.”

    Has the matter affected relations between Kenya and Uganda?

    Kenyan authorities have swung between denying any knowledge of the operation and remaining silent, while Ugandan officials say that a lot of intelligence was shared between the two countries.

    “The government of Uganda was in touch with the government of Kenya. Otherwise, how would you arrest somebody in the middle of Nairobi and then bring him back to Uganda, whether through the airport or land, without the full knowledge and support of the state there in Kenya?” Information Minister Baryomunsi told Uganda’s NBS TV.

    Many Kenyans are asking about the nature of security ties between the two countries and if there was a full disclosure that Besigye would be charged in a military court.

    Last Tuesday, Kenya’s acting Foreign Affairs Minister Musalia Mudavadi refrained from giving clear answers to journalists, pleading that his country should not be judged “too harshly”.

    Mudavadi, who is also the acting interior minister, said Kenya was an open country, which allowed “a lot of latitude”. But he warned foreigners against causing a rift between Kenya and their home countries.

    He said Besigye’s matter would be resolved diplomatically, describing Uganda as Kenya’s “strong partner”.

    The acknowledgement by Uganda that Kenya was involved in the abduction has left the Kenyan government facing a backlash both in Uganda and back home.

    Some Ugandans have held protests outside the Kenyan embassy in Kampala while others have threatened to boycott Kenyan brands.

    Besigye’s detention follows a string of high-profile abductions and disappearances in Kenya, including the forced deportation of four Turkish refugees to Ankara, where they faced allegations of conspiring against President Recep Tayyip Erdogan.

  • How Uganda Got Delisted From The FATF Grey List

    How Uganda Got Delisted From The FATF Grey List

    Uganda has been delisted from Financial Action Task Force (FATF) Grey List after four years of implementing reforms needed to combat illicit financial flows.

    The East African Community (EAC) member state was placed on the list in February 2020 due to strategic deficiencies in Anti-Money Laundering and Countering Financing Terrorism (AML/CFT) measures.

    According to Uganda’s Financial Intelligence Authority (FIA), Uganda has implemented a series of rigorous reforms and demonstrated substantial progress in aligning its AML/CFT framework with International standards.

    “Uganda’s exit from the FATF Grey List is a testament to our unwavering commitment to fostering a transparent and secure financial environment. It reflects the concerted efforts of our Government and Regulatory Authorities to strengthen our AML/CFT framework and safeguard our financial system from illicit financial activities,’ said Samuel Wandera, FIA Executive Director.

    Among key reforms the country has undertaken during the four years period include adoption of the Countering of Proliferation Financing Strategy which has helped in enhancing the use of Mutual Legal Assistance and maintaining comprehensive statistics.

    Uganda also developed and implemented a risk-based supervision of the financial and Designated Non Financial Business and Professionals (DNFBP) sectors, ensured that Law Enforcement Agencies and Judicial authorities apply the ML offence consistent with the identified risks as well as establishing procedures to trace and seize proceeds of crime.

    Wandera said the country also sought regional collaboration with other anti-money laundering organizations with the aim of combating illicit financial inflows.

    “Government of Uganda has been actively working to strengthen the effectiveness of its Anti-Money Laundering/Countering Financing of Terrorism (AML/CFT) regime to implement the action plan agreed to, with the FATF which comprised of 22 Action items,” he added.

    The exit from FATF Grey List now means Uganda can now enhance its attractiveness to investors and facilitate greater access to International Financial Markets.

    Kenya last week landed on the list with National Treasury saying the country has been compliant in some areas though facing challenges in others.

    In a bid to seal loopholes exploited by criminals engaged in illicit financial flows, Treasury said key achievement has bee the enactment of AML/CFT Amendment Act 2022 which has helped address key legal and compliance deficiencies.

    “The National Treasury is actively engaged in this process and anticipates minimal effects on the country’s financial stability and the cost of conducting business in Kenya,” said Prof. Njuguna Ndung’u, National Treasury Cabinet Secretary.

  • 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.

    [email protected]

  • Uganda’s Ghetto Kids Sails Into Britain Got Talent 2023 Grand Finale

    Uganda’s Ghetto Kids Sails Into Britain Got Talent 2023 Grand Finale

    The dancing kids of Uganda called Ghetto Kids have made it to the finals of the popular talent competition reality show, Britain’s Got Talent.

    The Ghetto Kids received a standing ovation from all four judges for their uplifting performance which aired on Wednesday night.

    Following the performances, hosts Ant and Dec spoke with judges Alesha Dixon and Simon Cowell picked the Ghetto Kids as their standout act.

    The six, aged five to 13, are orphans who live together in Uganda after being adopted by their father Daouda Kavuma. The kids are Priscila, 12, Asharif, 12, Akram, 13, Shakib, 12, Madwanah, 13 and Josephine, 5, who have become fan favourites due to their energetic routines.

    The six are among 31 who Daouda has given a home to after finding them living on the dangerous city streets. Using dance to help them fulfil their potential, the former primary school teacher has so far changed the lives of around 200 children. Many of them have gone on to study at university, have successful careers or start families of their own.

    Britain’s Got Talent grand final will premiere on Sunday, 4 June.

  • Ugandan Activists Call For Sanctions After Tough Anti-Gay Law Passed

    Ugandan Activists Call For Sanctions After Tough Anti-Gay Law Passed

    (AFP)-Ugandan activists called on foreign donors to impose sanctions on rights abusers after President Yoweri Museveni signed an anti-gay law described as among the world’s harshest.

    The veteran leader defied warnings that approving the much-criticised bill against homosexuality would strain ties between Kampala and key international partners and aid donors, including Washington.

    Among other harsh measures, the new law prescribes a death penalty for “aggravated homosexuality” in certain circumstances, although Uganda has not carried out capital punishment for many years.

    The move has trigged outcry and calls for a tough response from Uganda’s diplomatic and financial backers.

    “This is a key time for stakeholders, such as the US and the EU, to move forward with sanctions against Ugandans implicated in human rights abuses,” a coalition of Ugandan activist groups said in a statement late Monday.

    They warned that the “dangerous and discriminatory” law would further shrink space for civil society under Museveni, whose rule has become increasingly authoritarian since he took power in 1986.

    “Creating new crimes like these are a well-know way to engineer a legal basis to throw those with divergent views behind bars,” said Clare Byarugaba from Chapter Four Uganda, one of the groups calling for sanctions.

    She said the law would also discourage members of the LQBTQ community from seeking treatment for HIV and would “devastate the fight” against the disease in Uganda.

    – ‘Undermine relationships‘ –

    Ugandan lawmakers have stood firm against western criticism over the bill since it was first introduced to parliament in March, even if it meant cuts to foreign aid or other repercussions.

    US President Joe Biden on Monday said it was “a tragic violation of universal human rights” and threatened to cut aid and investment if the bill was not repealed.

    Biden said he had asked his National Security Council to assess what the law means for “all aspects of US engagement with Uganda”, including services providing AIDS relief and other assistance and investments.

    He said the administration would also consider sanctions against Uganda and the restriction of entry into the United States for people engaging in human rights abuses or corruption there.

    EU foreign policy chief Josep Borrell said the Ugandan government was obligated to uphold the rights of all its citizens and “failure to do so will undermine relationships with international partners”.

    In 2014, donors slashed aid to Uganda after Museveni approved a bill that sought to impose life imprisonment for homosexual relations, but was later overturned.

    The Netherlands froze a seven-million-euro subsidy to Uganda’s legal system, while Denmark and Norway redirected around six million euros each towards private sector initiatives, aid agencies and rights organisations.

    The US — under President Barrack Obama — also cut aid and trading rights.

    Though criticised abroad, the latest anti-gay bill has enjoyed broad support in the conservative country, where lawmakers defended the measures as a necessary bulwark against Western immorality.

    Homosexuality was criminalised in Uganda under colonial laws, but there has never been a conviction for consensual same-sex activity since independence from Britain in 1962.

  • Museveni: Homosexuality Is A Big Threat And Danger To The Procreation Of Human Race

    Museveni: Homosexuality Is A Big Threat And Danger To The Procreation Of Human Race

    President Yoweri Museveni has called on African nations to lead in rejecting the promotion of homosexuality, describing the vice as a big threat and danger to the procreation of human race.

    “Africa should provide the lead to save the world from this degeneration and decadence which is really very dangerous for humanity. If people of opposite sex stop appreciating one another then how will the human race be propagated?” he asked.

     

     

    President Museveni made these observations while interfacing with a delegation of Members of Parliament from over 22 African countries and the United Kingdom who had converged in Entebbe for a 2-day First ever Inter-Parliamentary Conference on Family Values and Sovereignty that ran under the theme ‘Protecting African Culture and Family Values’.

    The delegation was led to State House Entebbe by Hon. Sarah Opendi, the Tororo Woman MP and Chairperson of the Conference and also the Chairperson of the Parliamentary Forum on Family.

     

     

    They called on President Museveni to thank him for his firm stand against homosexuality and to bring to his attention some of the African-Caribbean and Pacific – ACP/EU agreements that pose a threat and danger to the sovereignty of the Member States of the ACP.

    The Conference was also attended by experts who enlightened participants on the causes of homosexuality and possible remedies to the vice.

    President Museveni noted that initially the practice that was thought to be a deviation from the normal is more dangerous than drugs.

    He therefore sought the identification of the focal point of homosexuality as it is neither genetic nor hormonal.

     

     

    Dr. Wahome Ngare, a Senior Consultant and Chairman- Kenya Catholic Doctors’ Association clarified on the root causes of homosexuality.

    “So, broken families create homosexuals, they are children who are broken. They are not genetic or hormonal but psychological,” Dr. Wahome explained.

    Dr. Wahome further in his submission pointed out that this lifestyle is naturally sterile; it leads to increased demand in medical services, and it is not scientific.

    He further observed that homosexuality is not natural, it is not consistent with nature and culture as well as faith.

    “In fact, same sex unions and same sexual acts are anti-life, anti-family and anti-humanity. It should be banned in total,” he stressed.

    One of the researchers on the subject, Sharon Slatter- the President of the Watch International and the Chairperson of United Nations Family Caucus also cited some of the root causes of the practice as an abusive father who at times is never at home for the child, overprotective mothers, pornography addiction, sexual abuse or children who were bullied and felt marginalized.

    She added that most of the children in these categories develop same sex attraction.

    President Museveni was glad to learn from Slatter that victims could be provided with some therapy and be rehabilitated like one victim who was deeply involved in homosexuality but was reformed and helped over 1000 other victims as well in their rehabilitation.

    “That means Homosexuality is reversible and curable. But it should not be preserved or propagated it should be confined” he said.

    The President who praised the Ugandan Parliament for passing the bill vowed never to allow the promotion and publicisation of homosexuality in Uganda, stressing that it will never be tolerated.

    “If I kissed Janet in public, I will not win elections in Uganda. It shouldn’t even be done in the sitting room because children are there. Now here you are, declaring, “I am a homosexual”, what are you trying to show?” He wondered.

    Slatter however warned of some actors from the UN who are busy moving around the world advocating against the establishment of rehabilitation centers for the victims of homosexuality.

    “They go around the world saying the right of Conversion Therapy should be preserved and should be declared illegal,” she warned.

    President Museveni at the same interface with African MPs thanked Hon. Asheme Songwe, MP and leader of the Malawi delegation to the ACP/EU in Brussels for bringing to his attention articles contained in the ACP/EU new draft agreement that pose a lot of challenges and are a threat to the sovereignty of the Member States and also to the Values of Family, Religious and Traditional Cultures.

    “We appeal to you to be the Ambassador in Chief across Africa, to sensitize each and every Head of State of the dangers of the post Cotonou agreement. For example Article 88, in the new agreement creates a super council of Ministers from ACP/EU who have powers to come up with the binding decisions which will override the various original agreements in our respective groupings like the ECOWAS, SADC and the EAC. Article 46.3 and 40 are advancing issues dealing with sexual gender orientation identity a matter that has been well explained by Dr. Wahome. Yes, we are poor but warn fellow Excellencies not to sign. By signing we are putting the future of our children at a great risk. We are excited with what is happening in Uganda,” he said.

    “Now I am immunized. I thank the MP from Malawi for alerting me not to sign the ACP/EU agreement. Now I am immunized against the ACP/EU agreement,” the President said.

    President Museveni however appealed to friends from the Western Political circles whom he assured of not having any enmity with them, to stop giving lectures to Africans and wasting their time because they will not succeed as colonialism was defeated from the onset of Organization of African Union (OAU) in Addis Ababa in 1963.

    President Museveni further assured Slatter that there will be no comprehensive sexuality education in Uganda, citing the Biblical phrase in the book of Ecclesiastics that points out that ‘there is time for everything’.

    “Now children are children. They need to grow as children. How can you invade their childhood and start teaching them about adulthood? he asked, calling Dr. Wahome to shed more light on the issue.

    “The part of the brain that makes them reason and make good decisions does not mature until 20 years of age. Therefore, if you come out to teach a child to make good sexual decisions, It is not possible. That is why we have the age of 18 as a cut off for what children can be allowed to do without parental guidance. Therefore, the child doesn’t have to be exposed to sexual matters until the inclination starts naturally,” Dr. Wahome explained.

    President Museveni also told his guests that the moment he receives the bill he will convene a meeting with the Ugandan MPs to harmonize on it and see how best to protect the children from homosexuality.

    Kaluma Peter, MP from Kenya praised President Museveni and the Parliament of Uganda for doing what they did as it is now an inspiration to other Houses on the continent to follow suit, adding that Africa is faced with a bigger problem than slavery or colonialism.

    “A person proposing that there should be same sex marriages or same sex relationships is a person seeking to wipe out the entire humanity out of the face of this earth. So, we are very- very happy to see you being firm on this. You give value to our sovereignty as Independent States in Africa. You have stood in the gap for Africa. We came to express our gratitude, respect, and salutations to you Your Excellency. So many African States are now coming up with similar Laws-Kenya is drafting the family protection Law, Ghana and Malawi and many others,” he disclosed.

    Sarah Opendi the leader of the delegation assured President Museveni that the bill recently passed by Parliament has some clauses that propose the establishment of rehabilitation centers for the victims of homosexuality.

    “Children could have been lured into this act innocently,” she added.

  • Uganda suspends 54 NGOs including prominent rights group

    Uganda suspends 54 NGOs including prominent rights group

    The Ugandan government announced on Friday it had halted the activities of 54 non-governmental organisations, a major escalation of its efforts to tighten control over civil society.

    One of the groups affected is the country’s most prominent rights organisation, Chapter Four. The National Bureau for NGOs, part of the ministry of internal affairs, said in a statement the shutdown was ordered “with immediate effect”.

    It said the decision was made because the groups had failed to comply with legislation covering their activities, including operating with expired permits, failing to file accounts or failing to register with the authorities.

    Some of the organisations ordered to close had taken part in an election monitoring operation on polling day in January which was raided by security forces and several of their leaders arrested.

    The election saw President Yoweri Museveni returned for a sixth term in office after a violent campaign marked by the harassment and arrest of opposition figures, attacks on the media and the deaths of several dozen people.

    Chapter Four executive director Nicholas Opiyo confirmed his group had received the government’s order to close and described the situation as “serious”.

    Chapter Four which trades as an independent not-for profit non-partisan organization dedicated to the protection of civil liberties and promotion of human rights for all in Uganda is one of other 15 NGO’s that have been indefinitely suspended over the same issue.

    The other organizations include; Citizen’s Coalition for Electoral Democracy – CCEDU, Femrite Uganda Women Writers Association, African Humanitarian Action, Safe Places Uganda Foundation, Citizens Platform for Democracy and Accountability, Growth Networks Uganda, Pallisa Civil Society Oraginsation Networks, Citizens Election Watch IT, Youth Line Forum Uganda, Arise Africa International, Dotwa Africa, Rwenzori Consortium for Civic Competence, Centre for Conflict Resolution and Youth Equality Centre.

    Charity Ahimbisibwe, who leads the Citizens’ Coalition for Electoral Democracy (CCEDU) — another of the shuttered organisations — described the government action as “extremely unfortunate”.

    Ahimbisibwe said the move came after the organsation had received repeated summons to government offices since it released a report which had catalogued malpractice during the election.

    Ahimbisibwe said the CCEDU’s operating permit had expired but it had asked for an extension because it was not possible to renew it during the long coronavirus lockdown and apparent stalling by local government officials.

    “As a law-abiding body we will not continue to operate without the permit,” Ahimbisibwe said.

    On Saturday, Museveni had publicly scolded Uganda’s security forces for using excessive violence, as the opposition alleges hundreds of their supporters disappeared or died following the violent election crackdown.

    The veteran president, who was re-elected despite widespread reports of irregularities, blamed “indiscipline” and “laziness” among state forces for incidents that resulted in the death of Ugandans.

    At least 54 people were shot dead in November while demonstrating over the arrest of Museveni’s main political opponent, the rapper-turned-MP Bobi Wine.

  • Equity Bank Linked To Ruto’s Money Laundering Claim In Uganda’s Vaccine Plant Saga

    Equity Bank Linked To Ruto’s Money Laundering Claim In Uganda’s Vaccine Plant Saga

    Gloves are off for President Uhuru who now more than ever appears to be moving rocks to hit his friend turned foe and his deputy, Ruto.

    It all started with the blockade of his flight to Uganda in a move that was directed from the Statehouse, while making a clearance on the issue, Interior PS said that Ruto didn’t meet the requirements to fly out and more so that he needed to acquire a clearance from the President himself given he’s not only a civil servant but his deputy.

    Ruto on his end has said that the blockade was meant to ridicule and embarrass him saying that he has never had to seek clearance or permission from the president to travel.

    Reports are now emerging that the decision to block Deputy President William Ruto from travelling to Uganda was made on July 31 following concerns by the government that his frequent travels to the neighbouring country could be linked to money laundering schemes.

    And even as debate on the aborted trip rages, focus by security officials has shifted to seven Turkish nationals, six men and a woman, who have been shuttling between Istanbul, Entebbe and Nairobi for the past few months.

    Their activities, which culminated in the standoff at Nairobi’s Wilson Airport on Monday when Ruto was blocked from travelling out of the country by immigration, have been closely monitored for months by Kenyan authorities.

    Ruto has claimed that he was leading a delegation to commission a Covid-19 vaccine plant that he had helped Turkish businessman Harun Aydin to put up.

    Speaking during an interview with a local radio station yesterday, Ruto claimed he had helped Aydin to acquire a Sh15 billion loan from Equity Bank to set up a vaccine processing factory in Uganda, which he and three other businessmen alongside his close allies were scheduled to commission on Monday.

    “I helped him on one phone call. He said the benefits Ugandans will get are the same that Kenyans will get.”

    Many have questioned as to how simple it is for Equity to dish out Sh15B as a loan merely from a phone call and to foreigners whose past are questionable.

    Claim by Ruto that he secured the loan of such magnitude by simply placing a call has elicited reactions from Kenyans who’ve been victims of banks collapsing in insider, fraudulent loans.

    Unauthenticated letter doing rounds on social media allegedly from Equity Bank, has distanced the bank from the claims by DP that he secured the loan via a phone call.

    The unauthentic letter doing rounds.

    However, Uganda President Museveni affirmed that indeed it was Equity Bank that financed the project.

    The focus is now on the Bank and how easily manipulated it can be that a phone call broke the ice and foreigners easily given Sh15B an amount that can collapse an institution.

    Detectives on trailing the money flow and possible fraud in laundering, puts the bank in the middle of a circus that includes the deputy President, the foreign investors in what could be a long chain with conspirators. Banks have been used before in channeling dirty moneySiphoning dirty money and even with fines which Equity has been a casualty of CBK in several plunder of public funds, has never stopped the trade.

    Equity Bank was fined Ksh 120 million for facilitating NYS and other scandals where money was packed in bags. Banking industry is the second largest criminal cartel in Kenya second only to the government.

    Intelligence sources believe that Ruto by virtue of his office, influenced, brokered and ‘secured’ a loan from Equity Bank while working with Turkish nationals in the suspected money laundering scheme in Uganda before he was caught pants down. Bank allegedly used as a conduit. The new developments now put the bank under investigation and it’s only a matter of time before the truth come to surface. Question is how many such risky deals could be going on without public’s attention. And just how safe is depositors and investors money held at equity safe if a phone call can get Sh15B lifted from their bank with so much ease. Was this a political bargain and part of deal between Ruto and Equity Bank?

    During Ruto’s July 6 private visit to Uganda, he had met two men and a female, all Turkish nationals according to intelligence sources.

    Two of the foreigners, Hamit Demir, holder of passport number U23165848 and Mehmet Akif Bagle, holding passport number U11979628, flew from Nairobi’s Jomo Kenyatta International Airport to Entebbe on July 6. They had applied for Ugandan visas while in Kenya.

    Since there are no direct flights between Entebbe and Istanbul, the Turkish capital, travellers have to go through Kigali, Addis Ababa, Cairo, Nairobi or Doha.

    The two departed JKIA at around 8.30am and arrived in Entebbe International Airport at around 9.50am, according to sources.

    The sources said intelligence officers had launched a probe into the activities of some of the foreigners. Security officials were, however, not sent to Uganda to establish the real agenda of the meeting “due to risks involved”.

    Following these developments, senior Kenya government and security officials decided on Saturday July 31 that the DP would not be allowed to travel out of the country. He was, however, not informed.

    Intelligence officials believe the meetings with the foreigners point to a scheme where the visitors could be used to launder money currently outside the country by purporting to invest it in Kenya.

    This might explain why Monday’s controversial trip that involved some politicians and businessmen close to Ruto was billed as an investment mission where the Turkish man Aydin was presented as a partner in a multi-billion shilling fruit farming venture.

    Kapseret MP Oscar Sudi, one of the MPs in Ruto’s delegation, has said they wanted to explore farming opportunities in the neighbouring country.

    “There is a large fruit farm of which the Ugandan government can buy shares,” Sudi said.

    Money laundering, according to authorities, seeks to hide the source of money believed to have been obtained illegally, by passing it through channels including commercial transactions and other forms of investment.

    According to the Financial Reporting Centre, such schemes seek to hide and legalise the funds without catching the attention of authorities and also making sure all connections of the funds to criminal activities is removed.

    Finally, the “cleansed” money returns to the owner in an indirect way, and is used for legitimate purposes.

    According to the United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime (UNODC) about Sh200 trillion is laundered globally every year.

  • Tullow Oil Global CEO And Exploration Director Forced To Resign For Exaggerating Oil Discovery In Ghana

    Tullow Oil Global CEO And Exploration Director Forced To Resign For Exaggerating Oil Discovery In Ghana

    Questions have started arising from what exactly is the dangling London-listed Tullow Oil (LON:TLW) doing in Kenya’s Ngamia 1 and 2 just like other ‘African’ discoveries the firm has allegedly invested in.

    Tullow Oil, which is active in Ghana, Kenya, and Uganda, has seen recently setbacks in its flagship projects in Africa.

    In Ghana, production performance has been significantly below expectations from the Group’s main producing assets, the TEN and Jubilee fields, the company said in a statement, slashing its production guidance for FY 2020 from the FY 2019 forecast.

    The British based oil exploration firm Tullow Oil has dropped with immediate effect its global CEO Paul McDade and Exploration Director Angus McCoss following the executive’s poor management and exaggerated productivity of key West African exploration market.

    In an operational update issued on Monday, Executive Chair Dorothy Thompson noted that the board has been disappointed with the poor performance of the African assets.

    “The Board has, however, been disappointed by the performance of Tullow’s business and now needs time to complete its thorough review of operations. A review of the production performance issues in 2019 and its implications for the longer-term outlook of the fields has been undertaken and has shown that the Group needs to reset its forward-looking guidance,” Thompson said,

    Independent reserve audits are indicative of flat output following the downward adjustment in reserve volumes.

    “In light of these new production forecasts, there will be a thorough reassessment of the Group’s cost base and future investment plans in order to allocate appropriate capital to the Group’s core production assets, development projects and continued exploration,” added Tullow.

    In the half-year to June, Tullow posted a net profit of Ksh.10.5 billion supported largely from growth in discovered resources, lower operational costs and a slide in short-term debt maturities.

    In Kenya, Tullow Oil also has to reach an FID on-field production and completed a deal to export 200,000 barrels of crude oil, in its first-ever export of the commodity.

    “We are now an oil exporter. Our first deal was concluded this afternoon with 200,000 barrels at a decent price of US$12 million. So I think we have begun our journey and it is up to us to ensure that those resources are also put to the best use to develop our country to make it both prosperous and to ensure we eliminate poverty in Kenya,” President Uhuru Kenyatta said.

    Commercial quantities of crude oil in Kenya were discovered in 2012 in the South Lokichar Basin. Africa-focused Tullow Oil, which discovered the resources, has continued its exploration and appraisal drilling campaigns in Kenya.

    In June this year, Kenya’s government signed an agreement with France’s major Total, Tullow Oil, and Africa Oil to develop an oil processing facility with a capacity of 60,000 bpd-80,000 bpd, as part of Kenya’s plan to begin commercial oil production within a few years.

    In the release of its first-half results last week, Tullow Oil had said that it expected the first export cargo of oil of the Early Oil Pilot Scheme (EOPS) to be sold and lifted in the third quarter of 2019.

    Regarding the full field development, Tullow Oil said that Kenya’s government has gazetted the land required for the upstream development in Turkana, and pipeline land surveys by the National Lands Commission began in the first week of July.

    “An Upstream Water Framework agreement has been drafted by Tullow and submitted to the Government of Kenya for their review. Given this significant progress, the FID of the Development is now targeted for the second half of 2020,” Martin Mbogo, Managing Director at Tullow Oil Kenya said.

    But the Africa-focused oil explorer and producer has been silently shelving slashed productions. This has seen the firm suspend dividend amid massive poor productions.

    Is Tullow Oil frying Kenya? Will we ever see Kenya export oil? Why is the government signing closed agreements with the firm that has now clearly been exposed of productivity exaggeration?

    I don’t have access to the feasibility study results the firm allegedly did, but I’m of a perspective that we don’t have oil that can run nor be drilled for more than a decade. We are in a corrupt country that might be exporting air at the expense of poor taxpayers. Tullow Oil is a scam blanketed by petroleum CS John Munyes and a real time-bomb waiting to explode with coffers funds.

     

     

  • Uganda To Launch Drugs, Medical Equipment And Blood Delivery Services By Drones

    Uganda To Launch Drugs, Medical Equipment And Blood Delivery Services By Drones

    Even though there is no law legislated-just yet- Kenya Civil Aviation Authority (KCAA) has banned the private use of Unmanned Aerial Vehicles in Kenya. KCAA has issued a dour warning to private UAV owners flying their drone(s) in Kenya airspace. According to KCAA,  if you are caught, you will be fined of Sh100,000 or a year in prison or both.

    In the meantime, A drone service firm, Flexdrone Ltd, has signed a deal with the Ugandan government to deliver blood packages, drugs, and medical equipment to public health facilities.

    In a deal that is said to be launched officially in March, According to Reuters reports, Uganda will join other African countries, such as Ghana, Rwanda, that have deployed unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs) to help public health logistics.

    Reuters quoted John Goslino, CEO Flexdrone stating firm was launched by a Ugandan and a German an will start a delivery service in March. According to Goslino, Flexdrone has already secured approval from the Information and Communications Technology Ministry and they were awaiting an endorsement from the Health Ministry.

    “We are trying to provide the products that are needed by the patient and the health worker who is working in the village when that person needs it,” Goslino said.

    Flexdrone CEO said that his firm had partnered with Ugandan start-up firm Sysimo Technologies to develop a mobile app for the on-demand delivery service. They are set to deploy drones capable of carrying 5 kg each but could use bigger drones as demand expands.

    Image result for zipline drone rwanda"
    Photo|TC

    Uganda will be joining Rwanda which launched a similar service in mid-2016. The services are still in use and manned by a California-based robotics company Zipline.

    Zipline is an American medical product delivery company that designs, builds, and operates small drone aircraft for delivery of medical products, with a focus on providing services in Africa. The company operates four distribution centers in Ghana, where it was launched, and two in Rwanda.

  • Kenya To Share Fish-rich Migingo Island With Uganda

    Kenya To Share Fish-rich Migingo Island With Uganda

    The government of Kenya thrown a white flag in a battle of Migingo island disputed between her and Museveni led Uganda.

    Foreign Affairs Cabinet Secretary Monica Juma on Wednesday said that Kenya had signed an MoU with Ugandan authorities to allow fishermen and other Lake Victoria users to access either side of the boundary. This comes even as the government maintains that the Island belongs to Kenya.

    “Kenyans should know that these boundaries are shared by communities across the countries, and we have to find a way to make them soft,” CS Monica Juma said.

    “My message to Kenyans is that we have their interests at the top of our minds and this can be realised by reducing the risks they face in accessing the trans-boundary resources. Kenyans must know the territorial integrity of the country will never be negotiated away.” Mrs Juma added.

    Speaking to local fishermen, they told me that the problem is not about fishing, the real problem is how Ugandan soldiers raid the Island and give “military punishment” to civilians who reside there.

    These Museveni men come a cain us like school kids. They take our fish and tell us to report them to whoever we fill is our leader. They even want us to paint out boats with colors of the Flag of Uganad.” Anonymous fisherman told us. 

    These are the real issues the government shoul be concerned and handling. Kenyan security forces should be at the Island to protect our citizens just as much as Ugandan counterparts are doing. If the government wont walk the talk and shove these boardroom deals and MoU, that have no impact on the ground, Museveni soldiers will keep on stealing and terrorising Kenyans.

     

     

  • Police Arrest A Ugandan Woman Who Feeds Her Stepdaughter With Menstrual Blood

    Police Arrest A Ugandan Woman Who Feeds Her Stepdaughter With Menstrual Blood

    Ugandan Police have once again arrested Anne Namata who was forcefully feeding her teenage stepdaughter on food mixed with her menstrual blood. She has been remanded for two weeks at Kauga prison in Mukono District, Uganda.

    The inhumane Annet Namata was first arrested in June but later went off the police radar after securing a police bond through corruption and her crooked connection with the local police.

    According to Kampala Metropolitan deputy Police spokesperson Luke Owoyesigire Namata was tracked down and re-arrested from Katosi landing site where she had sought temporary refuge

    Namata was taken to the police by her husband Yunus Lungu after neighbours alerted him that she had been mixing menstrual blood with the sauce which she forced the teenager to eat.

    Even though  Namata pleaded not guilty in court on Wednesday, her husband Mr. Lungu pleaded to the court to not let her out supporting his plead with a signed police affidavit of him earlier telling the police that her wife pleaded guilty to accusations before the Kitega Women Council where she also apologized.

    In a video clip, that Ugandan Police have taken down from the internet, recorded during the local council meeting, Namata confessed to the crime saying she was tempted and acted out of anger because of the preferential care that her husband was giving to the child which was not her own biological kid.

    Namata told the women council that she had been ill-advised by her friends to feed the minor with menstrual blood in order to turn her into a lunatic. On Wednesday, she appeared before Mukono Grade I Magistrate Patience Koburunga who read out the charges to her but said investigations are not yet done.

     

    According to medical research, menstrual flow contains discharge, cervical mucus, and uterine tissue, which makes it a favorable environment for bacteria and blood-borne diseases such as;

    • Human immunodeficiency virus (HIV)
    • Hepatitis viruses.
    • West Nile virus (WNV)
    • Cytomegalovirus (CMV)
    • Human T-cell lymphotropic viruses (HTLVs)
    • Parvovirus B19.

    Just to name but a few of what Namata could have, and probably has infected the stepdaughter with one or even worse, all of them.  Medics equally state that blood in any form is toxic when ingested, because the body has difficulty in excreting excess iron contained in the blood.

  • DCI Launches Investigations Into Postpaid Billing Fraud At KPLC

    DCI Launches Investigations Into Postpaid Billing Fraud At KPLC

    DCI sleuths have officially started investigations into an alleged postpaid billing fraud at Kenya Power.

    On 27th of June, DCI had summoned 200 Kenya Power staff and customers summoned to record their statements at its headquarters.

    According to DCI director George Kinoti, millions of monies were lost through a collusion between the staff, brokers and over 5,000 customers.

    Those directors at KPLC and private companies implicated will report to the DCI headquarters on diverse dates in July for further questioning.

    A source at DCI headquarters told this site that Tens of the suspects have already recorded their statements with DCI detectives.

    Fraud cases have hit most of state-owned parastatal.

    This is not the first time senior managers at KPLC are being arrested and questioned.

    July last year, KPLC managing board was arrested over the procurement of defective transformers and the irregularities in pre-qualifying 525 companies.

    18 Kenya Power staffs were dismissed after an audit report revealed that 350 out 500 contractors did not meet the set criteria.

    Government auditors recommended investigation of 19 Kenya Power employees that had shortlisted companies registered by their cronies and relatives.

    Kenya Power has been at the center of corruption for ages, last year, KPLC spent 15 times more to buy power from Independent Power Producers (IPPs) compared to Kengen.

    Kenya Power’s electricity purchase costs summary for 2018 seen by this site records that KPLC spent a total of Sh64.8 billion to buy 10.7 billion kilowatts of power from 19 producers up from Sh60.4 billion in 2017.

    Kengen was the biggest beneficiary of which they sold 7.9 billion kilowatts at Sh37.02 billion.

    Our checks reveals that Kenya Power bought a kilowatt of power from Triumph Power Generating Company at a cost of Sh69.26 compared to Sh4.63 from Kengen.

    Other IPPs including Gulf Power Limited sold a kilowatt at sh26.34, Iberafrica Power at 16.96, Power Tecnology Solution at sh14.70 and Tsavo Power sold a kilowatt at Sh11.77.

    Also Orpower 4 Inc, a subsidiary of Israel owned, OrmatTechnology, a firm listed on New York Securities Exchange sold 1.18 billion kilowatts to Kenya Power which earned them Sh11.4 billion.

    This means Orpower 4 inc sold a kilowatt at Sh9.68, more than double that of Kengen.

    Ethiopia sold 18.3 million kilowatts to Kenya at Sh27 per unit and Uganda 1.26 billion kilowatts at Sh6.54 per unit.

    This is, amongst other irregularities that the DCI are investigating, is what saw KPLC Managing Director Ken Tarus suspended.

    Our investigators checks reveals a list of the most notorious companies on the DCI’s radar;

    Moi University Campus (North Rift), Safaricom Investments Co-op Society Ltd, Nairobi Womens Hospital, Uchumi Supermarkets (North Rift), Holy Cross Fathers (Nairobi North) and Dandora Catholic.

    Detectives will also question the involvement of Sasini Coffee House Limited, Turbo Highway Eldoret, Eldoret Polytechnic, Franscisca Sisters of Anna (Western Kenya) and Seventh Day Adventist Church, South Nyanza on the billing fraud.

    Here is the full list of those summoned by the DCI

  • 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.

  • Government Abandons New SGR

    Government Abandons New SGR

    Kenya has been rolling deep down into public debt in the name of development. Government handlers have been on the frying pot for advising the government of projects that are not profit generating at the expense of the tax payers.

    Recently a Chinese loan worth Ksh.374 billion for the extension of the SGR from Naivasha to Malaba didn’t materialize. With some saying that Chinese now wants the government to prove that they are going to pay for the first loan.

    The government of Kenya now has plans to modernize the old railway track to link a newer line to neighbouring Uganda at a cost of Ksh.21.3billion.

    Sources in the government indicate that unidentified private financier has offered to fully back up the project. This is almost 15 times cheaper than building another almost modern railway with Chinese loan.

    also read:Container Freight Station Owners To Lose Sh35B Investment In SGR’s Cargo Debacle.

    The SGR was under  China’s “One Belt, One Road” initiative, a multi-billion dollar series of infrastructure projects upgrading land and maritime trade routes between China and Europe, Asia and Africa.

    The Nairobi-Mombasa SGR that was launched at a cost of Ksh 323.9 billion then later linked with Nairobi-Naivasha line costing Ksh.151.7billion might sound as a serious wastage joke when the government links it to Naivasha-Malaba track that will cost Ksh 21.3 billion.

    “We need to make sure that when we commission the SGR in August, we have connectivity to Uganda from the SGR so we have to rehabilitate that line to make sure it is properly functional,” said CS James Macharia,

    Macharia also said that using Ksh.15 billion to rehabilitate decades-old line from Malaba on the border with Uganda and using the remaining amount construct another short track connecting to the SGR at Naivasha within a year would be a faster option than building another SGR.