@JamesOgwan91364 @sk_bongomin93 Don't be silly.
Late Gadaffi was a president despite being a militant. And would visit in that capacity. Our cdf is only a militant.
@delyderric@CrystoPanda hope you still have your 5.
Have Yu ever seen your fans celebrating your concert success. It ends and they all go back to their places or work like normal days.
QUIZ
In 1974, Prof Khiddu Makubuya became the first Ugandan to be awarded a first-class degree in Law by Makerere University. However, before he could be awarded his first-class degree, the leadership of the Faculty of Law debated the matter.
Three of them, including...
I totally agree with you, Hon. Chief Justice — and here is why.
The first Head of the Anti‑Corruption Court was Justice John Bosco Katutsi. He presided over major cases: Teddy S. Cheeye for embezzling 120 million; Chandi Jamwa for causing financial loss of 3 billion; and Geoffrey Onegi Obel, then Chairman of the NSSF Board, for causing financial loss of 8 billion.
In the Onegi Obel case, the prosecution (IGG) repeatedly failed to appear, prompting Justice Katutsi’s famous remark: “This court is tired of trying tilapias when crocodiles are left swimming.”
Justice Katutsi is now retired, and since then, apart from the pension cases, I cannot recall any other major corruption matter of national significance being concluded by the Court.
My Experience Reporting Corruption
When I first considered reporting corruption, a mutual friend connected me to someone at @AntiGraft_SH, who then linked me to one of their officers. Informally, I submitted three cases with documentary evidence:
Approximately 29.5 billion
Approximately 22.7 billion
Approximately 3.5 billion
All this was done via WhatsApp, and the exchanges still exist. I waited for months, only to be told they could not handle the cases at that time. Meanwhile, I kept seeing their posts on X about arrests for 1 million, 2 million (upcountry) and I would occasionally comment about the “sharks” I had already reported.
Reporting to the IGG
I continued digging and strengthened my evidence. Confident in the law and the documents I had gathered, I formally reported the cases to @IGGUganda on 22 November 2022.
I did not report to a junior officer; I went directly to one of the Deputy IGGs and made a protected disclosure under the Whistleblowers Protection Act, 2010. We discussed the cases for over an hour, and she assured me of action.
For over three months we exchanged messages — only for me to later receive a letter from her that not only exposed me as a whistleblower but also accused me of being insubordinate because I had reported impropriety. At that point, I gave up on the IGG.
Turning to CID
In my circles, no one even mentioned @CID1_UG. It was as if people had lost confidence in reporting cases to CID. But the Whistleblowers Act also allows reporting to @Parliament_Ug, and some police colleagues told me CID had a new Director who was doing a good job.
So in May 2023, I rewrote my letter and addressed it directly to the Director, @Tom_Magambo — not to any police station or CID section. We did not have any discussion, which I understood; he did not know me, unlike the Deputy IGG who knew both me. He simply forwarded directed me to the appropriate office to leave the complaint.
To their credit, CID acted. They requested procurement files from the Ministry, interviewed several officers, and later wrote to @OAG_Uganda requesting a forensic audit. At that point, I contacted Forensic Audit Team to clarify aspects of my report and met with them. After that, I do not know what happened the report from @OAG_Uganda.
CID later informed me that the file had been with the @ODPPUGANDA for a long time and advised me to write to the DPP for an update. I did so in January https://t.co/EhTBBW6dyV this day — January 2026 — I have never received a response.
WHAT MAKES IT WORSE IS THAT THE CIVIL SERVANTS WHO WOULD WANT TO REPORT CANNOT BECAUSE NOTHING WILL COME OF THEIR EFFORTS AND YET THEY WILL BE TRUMPLED LIKE ONE IS MAKING "TONTO".
Conclusion
So, Hon. Chief Justice of @JudiciaryUG, when you analyse this sequence of events, it becomes clear why civil servants comfortably build multi‑billion‑shilling mansions. The system does not meaningfully pursue the “crocodiles,” and those who try to expose them are left unprotected, unheard, and eventually discouraged.
@mkainerugaba@NRMOnline@Parliament_Ug@StateHouseUg@KagutaMuseveni