J.N. Ssekazinga

Sex can change everything. Jacqueline Uwera Nsenga, 36, was on September 23 convicted and sentenced to 20 years in prison for the murder of her husband, Juvenal Nsenga, 48.
According to the trial judge, Justice Duncan Gaswaga, “the convict had not enjoyed her marriage, especially in the last 10 or so years. This was a family matter that went out of hand.” Among other marital problems, court was informed that couple did not sleep in the same bed though they lived in the same house. They did not greet each other nor discuss or do things together as husband and wife.
It appears that there was a rivalrous love triangle where Jackie Uwera was competing with one Loretta Mutoni, 27, for the love of Juvenal Nsenga (deceased). Loretta was Mr Nsenga’s niece. She was orphaned at an early age and raised by the Nsengas since 2001. Sometime in 2011, Uwera became uncomfortable with Loretta’s continued stay at home and asked her to leave. This was after she noticed that Loretta had become an insolent child who dressed skimpy around her husband and often refused to greet or obey her. To make matters worse, Uwera intercepted an SMS text sent to Loretta by the deceased reading “I don’t hate you, I am just a little bit tired, I love you.”
Twelve days before Nsenga’s untimely death, Uwera was shocked to find Loretta back at the house. A frank discussion ensued among the three. Uwera reportedly said in an angry tone, “By the way I am capable of doing very many things that I myself am scared of the length I can go.” These are words she wishes to take back right now because court did not take them lightly in convicting her.
The lesson to take from this is not new. The English playwright and poet William Congreve (1670-1729) left us an eternal reminder: “Hell hath no fury like a woman scorned.” Sex is a huge requirement in a marriage, and there is a lot of damage that can come from its absence.
How well do you know your car? Personally I don’t know much about cars but what I am sure of is this: a car cannot automatically accelerate when “in parking” unless you move it to “drive”. Ms Nsenga testified that on the fateful night, she drove a Toyota Mark X. She parked it at the home gate, got out and rang the doorbell twice. This clearly implies that she must have left the car in “parking” or “neutral”. How then could she have accidentally stepped on the accelerator pedal causing the car to “jerk”? Does this make any sense to all of you who, like Ms Nsenga, have driven for 11 years?
However, I have heard that some people mistakenly press down hard on the “accelerator” pedal instead of the “brake” pedal hence causing accidents. While an anomaly of this kind might have been the cause of death of Uwera’s husband of 19 years, she did not know enough about her car to convince the trial judge. The lesson we should take from this is that all drivers, regardless of gender, are accountable for the actions of their cars.
Having read 698 pages of the testimony recorded by the High Court in the Nsenga case, one truth is inescapable. On January 10, 2013, at about 9:45pm, only two people - Juvenal Nsenga and his wife Jackie Uwera Nsenga - were at that green gate that kept out strangers from their matrimonial home located at Plot 6 Muzindaro Road in Bugolobi. It is not known whether they talked before the incident. So how did our learned friends arrive at the conclusion that Uwera had the intention to kill her husband when he came to open the gate?
Ms Nsenga’s lawyers (all male) argued that what happened on that fateful night was a deeply regrettable accident but court rejected that story and chose to believe evidence adduced by the prosecution lawyers (all female) in support of Juvenal Nsenga’s dying declaration (his last words before he died).
In my view, what we learn from Justice Gaswaga’s analysis is that malice aforethought (intention to kill) may be deduced or inferred from circumstances surrounding the killing in question. For instance, the accumulation of mistrust, hatred, frustration and threats in a marriage over a period of 10 years can result in the formation of a tinderbox which may constitute the bedrock of intention to kill one’s spouse. This should makes us all deeply concerned that by sleeping in separate bedrooms and indulging in other mundane beefs one may become the first suspect if, God forbid, anything happened to one’s spouse.
From a strictly feminist lawyer’s perspective, I am disappointed by the weak and unimpressive mitigation conducted on behalf of Ms Nsenga. Mitigation is that phase of a murder trial after pronouncement of a conviction where the convict is given a chance to provide reasons why he or she should receive a lenient sentence. With proper mitigation, I believe Nsenga could have gotten a lesser sentence than the 20 years imprisonment to which she was condemned.
At the end of the 10-week marathon trial, Justice Gaswaga held the firm and carefully considered view that the Nsengas had lived an estranged life. Yet Uwera and her lawyers downplayed the seriousness of the situation by referring to the chronic, grave and excruciating problems of the Nsenga marriage as “mere challenges”. This was plainly bad mitigation strategy because the trial judge had offered them an olive branch by finding that all these problems had had “a negative impact on Uwera’s life”.
She was the victim of unrequited love in a scornful love triangle between her husband and foster child. The inability of the unrequited lover to express and fulfil emotional needs may lead to feelings such as depression, low self-esteem, anxiety and rapid mood swings between depression and euphoria. I submit that the above feelings characterised Uwera’s state of mind on the fateful night. Given that justice must be tempered with mercy for unrequited lovers and other persons implicated in crimes of passion. In my view, the appropriate sentence for Jackie would have been 10 years imprisonment. And if she had pleaded guilty to manslaughter or even murder at the beginning of the trial, she could easily have gotten at least 6 years imprisonment.
Unfortunately, Uwera’s lawyers gave their mitigation as follows: that she is a first-time offender, who has two children and had been taking care of them by the time she was remanded, and so on and so forth. They also wasted time and resources arguing a futile point at the eleventh hour that there is no prescribed penalty for murder; a clearly erroneous view of the decision of the Supreme Court of Uganda in Susan Kigula versus Attorney General.
In that case, the Supreme Court explained that trial judges had discretion whether to issue a death sentence or imprisonment as the penalty for murder. It follows therefore that the best use of a lawyer’s services after conviction is to make a spirited and exhaustive mitigation but, unfortunately, this was not done for Ms Nsenga.

Monday, 05 April 2021 00:00

Curfew, Facebook closure hurt e-commerce

A combination of factors, among them curfew, closure of Internet and some social media sites has caused a 50 per cent customer reduction for e-commerce platforms, according to Mr Ron Kawamara, the Jumia chief executive officer. 

Speaking on the sidelines of press briefing by the E-Trade Association of Uganda, Mr Kawamara said Jumia had registered a drop in clientele of close to 50 per cent since government imposed a blockade on Facebook.

“Our traffic has dropped by more than 45 per cent since the shutdown of [some] social media sites. We have had to go to other marketing platforms to reach our clients,” he said. 
During the briefing, the E-Trade Association of Uganda noted that at least 25 per cent of the employees in the e-commerce sector had been rendered jobless due to reducing customer orders resulting from shorter working hours. 
The association has a membership that brings together boda boda rider apps, online market platforms such as Jumia and tour and travel operators. 

 Mr Ricky Rapa Thomson, the SafeBoda co-founder, said they had experienced a drastic drop in business due to a number of factors, among them shorter working hours.
“Boda boda riders’ earnings are down by as much as 50 per cent due to the 6pm curfew, which affects close to two million riders. We request that curfew hours are extended to 11pm,” he said. 

On January 11, this year the government shutdown Internet and social media sites as Uganda headed into the January 14 general elections. 
However, the Internet was later restored but had affected a number of sectors, key among e-commerce platforms. 
Mr Kawamara also noted they were having a lot of challenges with customers who were ordering for goods on social media using network bypass such as Virtual Private Network (VPN). 

“Our systems are designed to block any orders or contact reaching us from clients that are using VPN because our firewalls have been built to safeguard our clients’ personal data such as banking details. We therefore can’t rely on VPN or receive orders and inquiries from VPN users,” he said. 

 

As from: The Daily Monitor

 
 
Saturday, 01 November 2014 00:00

‘I hire out my car at Shs2m per day’

How have you been able to maintain your car?
It has not been difficult in a way that its spare parts are got from Kenya. I intensively service it when its due to participate in any autoshows in the country or when I am going to drive it.

Where did you buy it from?
The first owner bought it from some place in Kenya during colonial times. It was also brought in the country still during colonial times. When I got it, it had colonial registration number plates W23. But at that time, it was almost junk and I had to restore it to give it a facelift from my workshop.

How do you cope with its maintenance?
I source its spare parts from Kenya and others in Uganda.

Have you received any offers from people wanting to buy it?
I have received a lot of inquiries from prospective buyers but I have no interest in selling it at all.

Where did you get the inspiration to rebuild it?
My family has a passion for old cars and has a mechanical background as well. When I come across any old car, I raise money and buy it. I and my family have another car restoration branch in Kenya.
Do you ever share it with friends or relatives?
My family members drive it a lot around Kampala because it is fully restored and serviced.

What is its engine size?
It is a 1900cc engine.

Is it automatic or manual?
It is a manual car.

Does it use petrol or diesel?
It uses petrol.

How would you categorise it?
It is a 1937 vintage car.

Have you considered using it for commercial activities?
Yeah, I hire it out to musicians for shooting music videos. I hire it out at Shs2m a day.

Does it have any unique features that many modern cars don’t have today?
Its doors open in the opposite direction and its windscreen tilts like a sunroof.

MORE ON THE LIGHT

The Citroën Traction Avant is an automobile produced by the French manufacturer Citroën from 1934 to 1957. About 760,000 units were produced. It was designed by André Lefèbvre and Flaminio Bertoni in late 1933 and early 1934.

Source:Daily Monitor

5TH ANNUAL EAST AFRICAN HEALTH AND SCIENTIFIC CONFERENCE OPENS IN KAMPALA, UGANDA

 

...President Museveni Commends Partner States on Regional Centers of Excellence in the Health Sector

 

East African Community Headquarters, Kampala, Uganda, 25 March 2015: Uganda's Vice President His Excellency Edward Ssekandi this morning represented HE Yoweri Kaguta Museveni at the official opening of the 5th Annual East African Health and Scientific Conference and International Health Exhibition and Trade Fair at the Kampala Serena Hotel in Uganda.

 

In a statement read by his Vice, President Museveni commended the EAC Secretariat and the Partner States for initiating the process of establishing Regional Centers of Excellence (CoEs) in the Health sector namely Nephrology and Urology in the Republic Kenya, Oncology in the Republic of Uganda, Cardiovascular in the United Republic of Tanzania and Biomedical Engineering and eHealth in the Republic of Rwanda.

 

He said this initiative will enhance EAC Competitiveness through highly skilled health workforce in biomedical sciences and also enable the East African citizens access quality and specialized services within the region.

 

The first phase of the project is expected to cost USD 72.75 million and will be supported by the African Development Bank.  The CoEs are expected to deliver high quality and skilled personnel in the specialized fields and reduce medical tourism, which costs EAC Governments an estimated of USD 150 million annually for treatment of Non-Communicable Diseases abroad.

 

At the same occasion, the Deputy Secretary General of the East African Community in charge of the Productive and Social Sectors Hon. Jesca Eriyo, who represented the Secretary General Amb. Dr. Richard Sezibera, informed the delegates that there was strong evidence that an investment in people's health was a key asset for society and for the economy as a whole.

 

"As you may be aware, the Health sector is also leading in creating Job opportunities and a driver of innovation and technology" noted Hon. Eriyo, adding that "As such, health systems strengthening have an important role in achieving Millennium Development Goals to ensure sustainable and inclusive growth in the Health Sector and Economy at Large.

 

The Deputy Secretary reiterated that the overarching goal of the EAC Health Sector Programme was to establish and sustain stronger regional health systems including health research institution. In this regard, the EAC official informed the delegates that, the Protocol for Establishment of the East African Community Health Research Commission (EACHRC) had been ratified by all the five Partner States and instruments of ratification have already been deposited with the EAC Headquarters.

 

She disclosed that the EAC Council of Ministers and the East African Legislative Assembly had already appropriated USD 924,067 in the EAC Budget for the current financial year (FY 2014/2015) to facilitate operationalization of the East African Health Research Commission in the Republic of Burundi.

 

Hon. Eriyo also disclosed that the Community had developed scorecard, tools and indicators to track results and resources through the open health initiative (OHI) and that a regional data warehouse for reproductive, maternal, newborn, child, adolescent health and nutrition had been developed and plans were underway to expand and include data for communicable and non-communicable diseases surveillance in order to strengthen integrated approaches for disease prevention, control and management.

 

Uganda's Minister of Health, Dr Ellioda Tumwesigye informed the delegates that Uganda was proud to host the conference, which was providing an opportunity and a platform for synthesizing, sharing and dissemination of research findings to inform policy makers and programmers on evidence-based decision-making and mobilization of political will and resources for the Health Sector.

 

Burundi's Minister in the office of the President Responsible for EAC Affairs Hon. Leontine Nzeyimana saluted the EAC Partner States for initiating the Annual East African Health and Scientific Conference and International Health Exhibition, and informed the delegates that her country had initiated several measures geared towards mother and child care which includes, among others, free treatment for mothers and children under the age of 5.

 

Zanzibar's Minister of Health Hon. Rashid Seif Suleiman said strengthening health care services especially primary health care in the rural areas was very critical in the region and that investing in infrastructure, human resources, diagonistic services in medicine was good but most important of all was how to deliver the health care services to the people in the region.

 

Health and Social Welfare Deputy Minister of the United Republic of Tanzania Hon. Dr. Kebwe Stephen Kebwe, who is also the Chairperson of the EAC Sectoral Council of Ministers responsible for Health, informed the conference that globally, 2015 was a special year for the health sector in taking stock of what had been achieved during the MDGs of which 3 goals (MDG 4, 5 and 6) were health related.

 

He said the Conference was an opportunity for the region to re-align itself to the post 2015 era with regard to the health sector. "As we review the progress made to date and share experiences in this conference, it is important that we renew our commitment towards enhancing health sector investments, strengthening of health systems and the attainment of Universal Health Coverage in the EAC", affirmed the Chairperson of the EAC Sectoral Council of Ministers responsible for Health.

 

He noted that the momentum on regional cooperation had reached a point of no return and the Partner States were working more closely than ever before to improve public health. "Apart from developing robust policies, we are implementing various provisions of the Common Market Protocol which seeks to enhance free movement of people, capital, services and goods across the region, thereby improving the environment for doing business in the health sector and beyond".

 

The Conference, themed Investing in Health through strengthening regional health systems, and institutions towards the prevention and control of communicable and non-communicable diseases, is being attended by over 700 stakeholders.

Wednesday, 29 October 2014 00:00

Is honey good for diabetic people?

Dear Doctor: I am diabetic and I have been taking honey instead of sugar. Is it recommended? Mikairi Kabwijamu

Dear Mikairi: Diabetes is a condition in which the quantity of glucose in the blood is too high, either because the body does not produce enough insulin, produces no insulin, or because the body tissues do not respond properly to the insulin that has been produced.

This results in too much glucose building up in the blood and body, leading to fat being used for much of the energy needs. This excess blood glucose eventually passes out of the body through urine, sweat and saliva. So, even though the blood has plenty of glucose, the cells are not getting it for their essential energy and growth requirements.

Much as honey is superior to ordinary sugar, it is not suitable for diabetic people because it raises blood sugar.

Any food that pushes too much sugar quickly into blood should be avoided by diabetic people. Ordinary sugar is broken down into smaller sugars, glucose and fructose, which are then absorbed by the body to reach the blood stream. Honey contains the same sugars, fructose and glucose, which are immediately absorbed, causing a rise in blood sugar.

Honey is good at raising blood sugar when a person has low blood sugar due to the diabetic drugs they are taking.
Honey should therefore be on the shelves of people with diabetes since low blood sugar is dangerous and can cause death within a short period of time if not urgently managed.

 

Dear Doctor: Why do I develop diarrhoea whenever I am in my periods? I also suffer from a lot of pain. Alfonsina Mbabazize
Dear Alfonsina: Periods result from the shedding of the inner lining of the womb, so that it is replaced by a new one in preparation for pregnancy. To shed and expel this membrane in the form of a period, substances produced locally in the membrane called prostaglandins are helpful.

These substances contract the womb, causing abdominal pain. When these prostaglandins leak into the general blood circulation, they may cause a myriad of symptoms including headache and vomiting. Prostaglandins also trigger contractions in the bowels, resulting in diarrhoea, especially during the first few days of the period.

Over-the-counter drugs that reduce prostaglandin production, such as ibuprofen, can help stop the diarrhoea. These drugs should, however, not be taken as a prevention method because of the associated side effects such as inducing peptic ulcers.
A diet rich in kalo, bread and white rice can also prevent the diarrhoea.

 

Dear Doctor: I ate fish and the bone got stuck in my throat. I took a lot of water but this was not helpful. I have now developed stomach pain, and I think it is the bone that is piercing me. Do I need an operation? I want to stop eating fish.
Isaac Newton Gunda
Dear Isaac: Fish is a nutritious food which you should not abandon just because a fishbone got stuck in your throat. Eating fish requires a person to be alert so that they do not risk swallowing any sharp bones.
Many people usually eat a banana to slide a fishbone down the throat, which is better than using water.

Once the bone leaves the throat and enters the stomach, it gets digested by acid and the piercing pains you are feeling could be as a result of fear, and not necessarily the presence of the bone in the stomach.

It is only in a few circumstances, such as taking drugs for peptic ulcers, that stomach acid production (omeprazole) is likely to affect the digestion of fishbone, with the likelihood of it (the fishbone) escaping the acid stomach.

This bone may then pierce the intestines and cause obstruction.


Please visit a doctor who may do an x-ray of the abdomen to see if the bone is still in the stomach.

Dear Doctor: Does natural family planning involve the use of herbs? How effective are they (herbs) in family planning?

Dear Zura: Abstaining from sex during the fertile period to prevent pregnancy is called natural family planning. This is the method of family planning which is agreeable to some religious beliefs.

To use it successfully, however, a woman needs to calculate her fertile period and avoid sex during that time.

Body temperature and changes in cervical mucus are also some methods used to calculate a fertile period. Because of illiteracy in some cases, women do not have the courage to deny their husbands (who rarely participate in family planning) sex during their fertile periods. As a result, it becomes difficult to practice the natural family planning method.

Many women use the lactation amenorrhea method, where they are advised to exclusively breastfeed every three hours. This method, however, is only effective for the first six months after birth.

The benefit of using herbs as a family planning method may not be known because there are different types that women use. However, it is not advisable to use herbs since their effectiveness and side effects are not known.

 

 Source:monitor.co.ug

 

In Staten Island, a 6-year-old who used to be proud to call himself Liberian now hesitates because of the teasing. His mother, Oretha Bestman-Yates, who had visited family in Africa last summer, was forced to go on unpaid leave at her hospital job, according to the New York Post.

And in Texas, where Thomas Duncan died and two healthcare workers contracted the Ebola virus, children of African families who were born in this country have been questioned by school authorities.

“A neighbor of mine said her daughter was called to the principal’s office to ask when she was last home,” said Carolyn Woahloe, 33 of Fort Worth. “She was born here, but has an African accent.”

The 13-year-old’s family was from Ghana, where there have been no reported cases. “We joke and laugh about it because she educated the principal that Ebola is not in every African country,” she told NBC News.

 

“You have to educate people,” said Woahloe, who is president of the Dallas-Fort Worth Liberian Nurses Association.

“The stigma is there,” she said. “Kids go to school and because they have African parents, a lot of their classmates make fun of them, their accents and how they dress.”

Woahloe's 10-year-old was born in the United States and attends a school with “lots of diversity,” she said. “He hasn’t really felt any discrimination, but he says, ‘I feel really bad for the African children.’ I say, ‘What do you think you are?’”

So far, only four people have been diagnosed in the United States with Ebola, a disease that has killed nearly 5,000 in the Western African countries of Liberia, Guinea, Sierra Leone and Nigeria since the outbreak earlier this year, according to the World Health Organization.

The WHO says Ebola has been contained in Senegal, from which Ousame Drame, the father of the boys who were beaten Oct. 24 in New York City, had recently immigrated.

 

Charles Cooper, who is president of the African Advocacy Council in New York, said he was “shocked” to hear of the beatings and called for the Bronx school to take action. 

The sixth-grader was punched and kicked the concrete first and when he screamed for help, his brother ran across the playground to help and was also attacked, according to Cooper.

“We have been hearing lots of stories and I am glad this family came forward to ask for help,” Cooper said. “This is affecting the African economy in New York City. They’ve lost a lot of business because their usual customers don’t want to go to them.”

The boys’ father said his sons had been bullied for several weeks before the incident.

“Eventually, a staff member realized what had happened and grabbed them,” Cooper told NBC News. “The injuries were so severe they were bleeding with knocks on their heads and on their arms and legs. They were kicking and punching them and they were screaming.”

New York City’s Department of Education had this response to the incident Monday: “…we are investigating and we take this matter very seriously. DOE school safety staff are on site today to mediate this incident and ensure the 

safety and support of these students, school staff and their families.”

 

Other predominantly African communities say they have not seen the kind of bullying incidents that occurred in New York City and elsewhere. Samuel Sampson, president of the Liberation Nurses Association of Minnesota, said his group has launched an awareness campaign to preempt any hate crimes.

“Folks are coming in every day from Liberia, Sierra Leone and Guinea, but we don’t have to treat them like second-class citizens,” said Sampson. “And kids going to school don’t have to be disrespected just because they are African immigrants.”

The researchers, from the University of East Anglea (UEA) in the UK, publish their results in the American Journal of Clinical Nutrition.

According to the team, ovarian cancer affects over 6,500 women in the UK and 20,000 women in the US each year. Epithelial ovarian cancer - the most common form of the disease - is where the cancer begins in the surface layer covering the ovary.

This type of cancer "remains a highly lethal malignancy," note the researchers, adding that few modifiable risk factors have been established.

However, some previous studies have suggested that a diet rich in fruits and vegetables may be associated with a decreased risk, but subsequent studies have produced inconsistent findings.

Plants contain flavonoids that adjust key cellular signaling pathways and regulate cancer-inflammation pathways, note the team, which suggests flavonoids might be the compounds in plants that could reduce ovarian cancer risk.

Flavonoids include flavonols - found in tea, red wine, apples and grapes - and flavanones - found in citrus fruit and juices.

'Just a couple cups of black tea daily linked with a 31% reduction in risk'

To further investigate the link between flavonoid intake and ovarian cancer risk, the researchers studied dietary habits of 171,940 women aged between 25-55 as part of the Nurses' Health Study and Nurses' Health Study II over the course of 3 decades.

"This is the first large-scale study looking into whether habitual intake of different flavonoids can reduce the risk of epithelial ovarian cancer," says lead author Prof. Aedin Cassidy, from UEA's Norwich Medical School.

To calculate the participants' dietary intake, the researchers analyzed validated food-frequency questionnaires that were collected every 4 years and found that main dietary sources of flavonols were black tea (31%), onions (20%) and apples, while the main sources for flavanones were citrus fruit (36%; 27% from orange intake) and juices (63%; 54% from orange juice).

During the 16-22 years of follow-up, the researchers found that there were a total of 723 cases of medically confirmed ovarian cancer.

Results show that participants who had the highest intakes of flavonol and flavanone had a lower risk of developing epithelial ovarian cancer than those who had the lowest intakes.

The research team, from the University of Montreal's School of Public Health in Canada, publish their findings in the journal Cancer Epidemiology.

According to the researchers, the link between sexual activity and prostate cancer risk remains controversial. Some studies have associated high sexual activity with a greater risk of the disease, while others have suggested the opposite.

In this study, the team set out to determine whether the number of sexual partners men have throughout their lifetime influences their risk of prostate cancer.

They analyzed 3,208 men who were part of the Prostate Cancer & Environment Study (PROtEuS) in Montreal, Canada. Of these, 1,590 were diagnosed with prostate cancer between 2005 and 2009, while the remaining 1,618 men were free of the disease.

As part of this study, all men were required to complete a questionnaire that asked about their sexual activity, as well as sociodemographic, environmental and lifestyle factors.

28% lower prostate cancer risk among men who slept with more than 20 women

The team was not surprised to find that men who had a relative with prostate cancer were twice as likely to have the disease themselves. A family history of prostate cancer is a well-established risk factor.

However, the researchers found that a man's prostate cancer risk also appeared to be influenced by the number of sexual partners he had in his lifetime.

Men who reported never having a sexual partner were twice as likely to develop prostate cancer than those who reported having sexual partners.

However, the team found that men who had slept with more than 20 women in their lives had a 28% lower risk of developing all types of prostate cancer and a 19% lower risk of developing aggressive prostate cancer, compared with those who had slept with fewer than 20 women.

Monday, 26 January 2015 00:00

Archbishop Ntagali sued

Archbishop Stanley Ntagali has been dragged to the High court for allegedly forcing former Kitgum Bishop Benjamin Ojwanga into early retirement.

Rev Canon Samuel Obol, Rev Laban Awor, Canon Omony Ogabo and Arthur Katongole last week asked court to allow them to file a representative suit against Ntagali, the board of trustees of the Church of Uganda and the house of bishops.

In their application, they allege that last month, at the urging of the house of bishops, Ntagali ordered Ojwanga to retire prematurely from his position.

“There are thousands of Christians in Kitgum diocese and in the church of Uganda generally who are opposed to the unlawful actions and the decisions of the respondents to remove the Right Rev Ojwanga from his office as the bishop of Kitgum diocese or any other bishop for that matter without following the cannons of Uganda, the laws of Uganda and the principles of natural justice,” the application reads.

Through Opwonya and company advocates, they say that ever since Ojwanga was elected bishop of Kitgum in the year 2000, some clergy were not happy with his election.

According to the four, in the recent past, many dioceses of the Church of Uganda have been experiencing restlessness caused by sections of Christians pushing for the removal of their bishops since some have been removed prematurely for various reasons.

In his affidavit in support of the application, Rev Obol, the lead applicant, says his passion is to help prevent the Church of Uganda from imploding due to internal contradictions.

“The instability has been created because the tenure of bishops is not clear, which has led several Christians to revolt. When some rebellious Christians generate pressure in various dioceses, they demand the removal of their leaders hence sometimes the church doesn’t follow set rules,” Obol states.

The applicants want court to issue a permanent injunction restraining Ntagali from installing Benoni Ogwalo as a caretaker bishop in Kitgum.

Source: Observer.ug

KAMPALA. At 8am on Saturday, my phone rang. The caller was precise and to the point. She had a breaking story of national importance.
“I want you to break that story. You can take my word that no other journalist both here and outside Uganda has it, you are the only one I am telling and please don’t break my trust,” she said.
The anxiety and excitement that comes with breaking a story is one that sends the adrenaline surging; only one who has practised as a journalist can know.
What was the story? The source was not ready to share for now. She laughed and said, “It is a big one, I will call you later.” Up until the afternoon, every phone call that came through stirred immeasurable anxiety.
True to her word, she called in the afternoon, saying: “The story is that Gen Sejusa is coming back to Uganda tonight. I have done my part. Do the rest. He lands at 10pm.” The source, however, requested that the story is only broken after the general had landed. Anything short of that would be breach of trust.
As I briefed the news editor, I could see his excitement, albeit restrained. The idea was that Sunday Monitor would change its late edition after the general’s flight had landed.
“We shall be on standby so go to Entebbe and text us when you see him, and then we shall change the cover,” the editor said. As I struggled to fight the excitement of being the first to tweet and post on Facebook about the general’s unannounced return. I received information that there were changes in the flight arrangements. Gen Sejusa would land between midnight and 1am.
I tipped off a senior colleague and photojournalist, hopped onto a company car and cruised to Entebbe, having our dinner at Lubowa. We kept resisting the urge to inform colleagues from other media houses and praying this was no hoax. This was a high-level operation.
By 2am, we were at the airport’s arrivals lounge. There was no security deployment. Gen Sejusa’s sister, whose presence we had learnt about, kept pacing about and making phone calls. We also saw renowned human rights lawyer Ladislaus Rwakafuzi making endless calls.
We approached Mr Rwakafuzi, who told us Gen Sejusa was his client. We also learnt that the Chief of Defence Forces, Gen Katumba Wamala, was at the airport en route to Nairobi while the Police Director for Operations, Mr Andrew Felix Kawesi, was also around “positioned strategically”. Meanwhile, the presidential convoy had bypassed us at Zana on the Entebbe highway, at about 11pm headed to Kampala.
As we waited for the general’s arrival, I could not help but wonder. “Would he be arrested? Would it be smooth sailing for him? Will he speak to us? What if he does not turn up anyway?”
These were the questions I battled with when at 3.13am, information came that Gen Sejusa had landed and was at the VIP lounge. We could see Mr Rwakafuzi and Brig Ronnie Balya, the head of internal intelligence, at a distance. They were watching as Gen Sejusa’s sister hugged him.
My colleague Isaac Imaka and I were the first to tweet about what we were seeing. I also made the announcement on my Facebook and Daily Monitor walls.
We realised we would not be allowed near him. We called Mr Rwakafuzi asking if he could link us up. The general first accepted before declining and instead dictating a brief message through Mr Rwakafuzi, asking that we relay it on KFM, our sister radio station. It was a request we could not honour at the odd hour of 3am.
Even if we had not gotten a detailed interview, we knew we could wake up with a scoop of a photo. As our photojournalist, Faiswal Kasirye, positioned himself strategically at the VIP Parking yard, ready to take a shot of Gen Sejusa boarding the waiting car, something happened. In a split second, the general was whisked away—leaving Kasirye helpless. He had missed the shot of a lifetime!
Later, Mr Rwakafuzi would announce that the sleek jeep was taking Gen Sejusa to Sembabule. The clandestine mission was over. Our photojournalist was dejected but we encouraged him—saying we could still find solace in the fact that we had broken the news first. We had not braved the cold Entebbe in vain.

politicians react to gen sejusa’s return

‘He did nothing wrong, he just wants to express his opinion and there is nothing wrong with that. I like him. Everyone wants to live home. Those making noise on social media speculating that he could have fooled them are the ones with problems because everyone is free to speak their mind,’
Brig Kasirye Ggwanga, presidential adviser on security in Buganda

‘I woke up to the stunning news and it was like a dream. If it was April 1, I would have thought it was a fools’ day prank. His return is as dramatic as his exit was. It is too early to judge this enterprising development, so many things do not add up. Is he on amnesty? It is hard to tell what is happening,”
Erias Lukwago, kampala lord mayor

“I am very happy that he has returned to Uganda.We should live here and solve our issues in Uganda, especially those of us who went to exile once. We should not put other Ugandans in a situation where they have to go to exil,”
(Rtd) Col Amanya Mushega,
FDC Western region Vice president