Have you visited Uganda, or did you plan to. Please visit the Nile for an expedition with a canoe. It's quite breathtaking. You will respect and enjoy the calmness that comes with the source of the Nile #UgTourism#ExploreUg#NoEPSnoStress
@Omujugujugu1@NRMOnline@GovUganda@KagutaMuseveni But Moses, thank God that you're an RDC for simply boot licking. Now that you're somehow competent, try your luck on serving the interests of your country not family, clan or villagemates.
@nbstv In our society, it's advisable that once you start developing such psycho-social behaviours, you seek both traditional or medical attention, this is because traditional spirituality is possible.
Point of Order Madam Speaker @AnitahAmong
The Protection of Sovereignty Bill 2026 is not on your website at this critical time when Ugandans are debating it. Are YOU in order Madam Speaker? @Parliament_Ug@SarahBireete
@nickopiyo "We are here for your trial, you cited it from your heart, so you MUST know what youre citing" remarks FM,NO one said Kyomuhendo is a bad attorney, we all agree he has a bad case that starts with every wrong element including bad research. & with no opportunity to yell[my emp. ]
The previous post is not about the performance of the state prosecutor who was under cross-examination, but rather the brilliant manner of his cross-examination by Counsel Fredrick Mpanga (Kyomuhendo is a good lawyer with a bad case).
There, in that instance, was pure, high-level, excellent court advocacy from which many could learn valuable lessons.
But let me raise a more granular point from that process: disclosure. The prosecutor misquoted the Soon Yeon Kong & Kwanga Mao v Attorney General, Constitutional Reference No 7 of 2007. He may have forgotten that the firm of AF Mpanga were the lawyers in that case and thus could not be misled about the court's findings.
That is why, when handed the court's decision, he could not point to a paragraph on the State's right, indeed to any mention of witness protection in the law, resorting instead to extrapolations and misinterpretations of the judgment.
The prosecution has treated disclosure as a discretionary power, thereby abusing the process.
The effect of the Soon Yeon case is the imposition of a duty on all parties to make both exculpatory and inculpatory disclosures. In simple terms, disclose both incriminatory and exculpatory (evidence of the innocence of the accused person, which may have been discovered in investigations). That is what a fair trial would mean and look like.
I hope the court rejects the request for an in-camera trial and the attempt to conceal the witness from public testimony. If you have a good-faith, strong case, bring it on in the public glare.
https://t.co/sqxIC2wrN6
The Uganda Society of Architects just called for withdrawal of the Sovereignty Bill. Straight lines, courage and candour, by design. Much respect @UgArchSociety.
Have you submitted your views to Parliament, or are you waiting for bells? Silence is not safety here.
@PSSEKABIR@SarahBireete I swear @SarahBireete you're so intelligent that I keep asking myself which cow's milk you drunk? Now you can block me like Mr. Avenger the only stupid muhiima. This law is null & void ab initio. There is NO law that can be superior than it's citizens.
@DoreenNyanjura@DoreenNyanjura I grew up & worked with rural communities & children [IRUCE], having had my primary school in Nyakabungo P/S -Rugyeyo Kanungu District, both my parents worked for gov't [one a primary teacher & the other a serviceman, the tales of village-life hit differently.