LRA used to commit crime in God’s name. You too offend the law and then tell us how you are a descendant of Jesus Christ, as if to insinuate that you do all the wrong you do in His name!!
I want to welcome back my brother @EriasLukwago from @mkainerugaba captivity. I missed his court appearance yesterday because I was travelling to Mecca. Allah will intervene in these matters like He has done before. Late Hajji Aziizi Kasujja was detained by Idi Amin in Mbuya military barracks. Kasujja's friends in the military told him, he was safer in prison. Can you imagine we are happy that Lukwago is in Luzira and not with Muhoozi!
You are used to bootlickers, that’s why you hate those who tell you the truth.
Again, your disregard for the rule of law is going to be your downfall…and soon!
Now ANYONE can drive an unmarked Toyota Hiace (Drone) to any corner of Uganda without being stopped by any police officer who still wants his job. Along the way, you can even pick anyone you want from anywhere (even a Minister) and torture, rob or rape them. No one will intervene, because everyone will think it’s an SFC operation.
@TonyNatif@BebeCoolUG@JollyMutesi 😂😂😂
He must have been fleeced by an impersonator of Ms. Mutesi J and he did not care to carry out due diligence.
His reactive actions may get him into trouble, if not handled well.
This man can not have that knowledge. He thinks Lukwago issued the summons!!! Its not enought to be the son of the president. Some times you need to stand on your own head. Not everything can be given by your father. In 20yrs your father will have answered yes to his God.
MPs are part of selected institutions dragging this country to its knees. No country should allow legislators to set their own salaries and benefits, because it creates a system of unchecked greed. We continue to pay the price for that mistake. Each MP will walk away with a cool UGX 44 million a month, yet only UGX 11 million of that is taxed. The rest is tax‑free which is a luxury ordinary Ugandans can only dream of. Add the UGX 300 million “vehicle allowance” per MP including those who have been there for 15 or 20 years, and it becomes nothing short of daylight robbery.
And why should ex‑official MPs appointed as ministers who are unelected MPs also receive the UGX 300 million? They have no constituencies to visit. They will find government vehicles waiting for them, or new ones will be bought for them by their respective Ministries. What exactly justifies paying them twice? What moral authority will MPs have to speak about corruption when the system itself makes them corrupt by default? Because I think none of them truly believe they deserve all this.
Meanwhile, the country is struggling to find UGX 28 billion to pay medical interns. The very people keeping hospitals running. This money can be got from the budget of the Speaker and Deputy and still leave more than enough for those offices. The contrast is obscene. At this rate, only God can save Uganda.
Ladies, just rent a gown and do the the photoshoot. Skip the marriage. You guys don't wanna be wives. Marriage isn't about the fancy ceremony. It's about obligations to your husbands which most of you cannot manage. Didn't they tell you a husband is supposed to be OBEYED? 😄
Ssemujju to Muhoozi: I’m not afraid of you; you’re not immortal
"So yes, I can feel pain. I can experience fear like any normal human being. But I will not lose sleep over Muhoozi. Let him come and arrest me. No problem.
Because after arresting me, will he become immortal?
Will he become an angel whom nobody can ever arrest?
Will he never fall sick?
Will even malaria become afraid to attack him?
Let Ugandans stop being excessively afraid of Muhoozi. Muhoozi has a duty to serve the interests of Ugandans, not his personal interests. Taxpayers pay him, and those taxpayers have every right to hold him accountable. So whatever he says, I care less."
https://t.co/WGXCMTfFzL
📹@BakerbatteLule
@EriasLukwago's home has this morning been surrounded by soldiers to stop him from serving Muhoozi Kainerugaba with court papers on the case we filed about the kidnapping of @kizzabesigye1 from Kenya.
Uganda still has significant ground to cover in its development journey. While headline GDP figures may appear promising, they mask a more sobering reality when viewed through the lens of per capita living standards. At the micro level, income disparity remains stark and has been driven largely by entrenched corruption.
Wealthy individuals have tended to channel their resources primarily into conspicuous consumption (luxury mansions, high-end vehicles, lavish parties, and overseas travel) rather than into productive investments in industrialization, high-value services, or scalable agribusiness. These sectors could generate widespread employment and offer competitive wages to absorb the country’s large working-age population. But wah, chaps do not want to know!
In essence, Uganda remains predominantly a consumptive rather than a productive economy.
Lifting the majority of Ugandans out of extreme poverty will demand sustained, multi-pronged effort. Priorities must include decisive action against corruption and the systematic recovery of public resources stolen over the past three decades. The education system needs fundamental reform, shifting its focus from producing job seekers to nurturing entrepreneurs equipped with practical skills and a growth mindset.
Public budgeting should prioritize large-scale, low-barrier financing for micro, small, and medium enterprises (MSMEs), with an emphasis on patient capital that supports long-term viability. Finally, the public service requires a comprehensive overhaul to address its bloat, entitlement culture, corruption, and patronage networks; factors that continue to impede the country’s growth potential.
Today, we declined to proceed with the trial of Dr. Kizza Besigye and Hajji Obeid Lutale after they were not produced before court or presented virtually from prison.
The unexplained failure to produce accused persons can’t be overlooked. It raises legitimate concerns about their welfare, safety, and access to justice.
The norms we normalize today become the precedents we live with tomorrow.
Across our region and continent, the defence of constitutional rights requires constant vigilance, for rights diminished in one case can easily be diminished in another.