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Ssebutinde Commissions solve nothing except……

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A section of the public and critics have lately been saying Andrew Mwenda has changed. I don't agree with them, and records of my publications going back in time bear me witness. Throughout my career, I have cherished the key cornerstones of journalism - truthful and accuracy; fairness and balance. I hereby reproduce some of the pieces I did back in time highlighting the position I have taken on contentious issues involving allegations of corruption. I hope this article and many more to come will guide the debate on whether I have changed at all.

This article was published in the Daily Monitor of Wednesday, November 6, 2002

The Lady Justice Julia Sebutinde commission of inquiry into Uganda Revenue Authority (URA) has brought to the fore a number of salient issues. Like most commissions on corruption in Uganda, the investigation into URA focuses on an important, but small problem with the Tax authority. Thus although the critical problem with Uganda’s tax administration is political interference from mainly the chief executive, the: Ssebutinde investigation is focus on a public Ritual of naming and shaming individuals in order to appease the public.

Ssebutinde conducts her inquiry with ferocious zeal. She yells at the witness, insults and passes judgment on almost every one-long before writing her reports words like “you are a liar”, “all of you belong to Luzira”,  “ he is a fraudster” etc are banded around and give hungry reporters and editors good headlines. To an angry public looking for a red herring, such public executions of people’s reputation make a lot of political capital, and a handsome public-profile rent for the lady justice.

We understand judges to be impartial and fair. That someone from the bench is therefore appointed to chair a commission of inquiry should be sign that justice and fairness to all is being thought. In fact the very essence of a judge is impartiality hearing two, often quarreling sides and deciding for one or the other party.

My own insight into Ssebutinde as a chair of this was born out of an interview I had with the former director of Criminal Investigations Department (CID). Chris Bakiza, when I called him about the information of the commission of inquiry into the police chaired by a judge, he happily said he looked forward to presenting his case before this “impartial” body so that the truth could come out. This was not to be, as Ssebutide turned the inquiry into a public humiliation enterprise against police officers.

The Uganda police force has tried its best to police this country amidst poor pay, political bashing by the president and constant budget cuts. They live in mortuaries, toilets and kitchens and waking up every morning to ensure that we are safe. The public humiliation to which Ssebutinde subjected them made a lot of headlines but did not improve their budget. Instead, it provided justification for the president to appoint an army officer to head the police and militarise it. It did not improve their welfare or professional efficiency, but as the president said the changes were to make the police vote “properly” in 2006.

This brings us the URA probe. A few days ago, former URA boss, Elly  Rwakakoko was accused of taking a Shs. 55m bribe' from hotel mogul, Karun Hirji. The source of this accusation was the Special Revenue Protection Service (SRPS), a para-military outfit organised by the president at State House to fight tax evasion, Socialised through a culture of institutional methods of work, RwaKakoko fought running battles against SRPS and State House, seeking to secure the bureaucratic autonomy of his organisation against an illegal military outfit that sought to run a parallel show. He left URA but has remained an icon of Uganda's public service. Rwakakoko enjoys a rare reputation, as a man of great integrity and honour, and his opinion on, any matter in Uganda would be taken seriously by many.

Thus when an accusation of financial impropriety was raised against him, 1 was keen to hear his Side of tile story. He gave a sound explanation. Without calling him to testify before her commission, Ssebutinde, with characteristic gusto, "rejected" Rwakakoko's explanation out of hand. Doesn't Rwakakoko deserve the benefit of doubt from the lady justice! or the right to be heard? During; the police probe. Karim was accused of many things including murder; Karim applied to be allowed to testify. Sebutinde refused, saying she was not investigating him. Karim complained that so much was being said against him, that bad publicity was hurting his business, that he just wanted an opportunity to defend his name before the same commission. Ssebutinde turned him down. Today, Ssebutinde says: "He is not a bona fide- investor; he is a fraudster!'' This is a justice of the High Court of Uganda pronouncing herself about a man she has never allowed before any of her commissions.

Karim is not an angel. But doesn't he deserve fairness from a judge'! One of the principles of natural justice is that you should not be a judge and a prosecutor in the same case. Ssebutinde plays both roles in the commission. The other is that you should not make judgement of someone without hearing his or her side of the story Although the law on commissions of inquiry allows the chair to adopt his or her own style of inquiry, we expect better when the chair is a judge because we attach the virtues of impartiality and fairness to them.

I was listening to Ssebutmde question the URA Deputy Director General, Steven Akabway and it felt like she was talking to her houseboy She even yelled at Akabway, questioning his grasp of the English language and telling him that "if you don't understand English I can interpret for you."

Akabway is a highly respected public servant and to treat him with the kind of contempt as Sebutinde did was, to me, rude. Justice Ogola chaired the commission of inquiry into the banking industry, and everyone who appeared there felt listened to.

Indeed, some of the big stories from that commission reflect the kind of attitude that we need to guard against. Take the case of URA commissioner for administration. Jack Bigirwa. He was accused by Ssebutinde of building a "large mansion" in Sheema Bushenyi, and putting up a large coffee estate on his land, all courtesy of corruption in URA. Bigirwa built the said house in 1984 and the farm as far back as 1980. He has been slowly improving on both over the last 22 years Bigirwa is one of this country's largest coffee farmers and makes more money selling seedlings. He chairs the Uganda Coffee Farmers' Association and sits on the board of Uganda Coffee Development Authority (UCDA). He is also a successful fish farmer with numerous ponds at his farm and makes good money selling fish. I am not saying that Bigirwa may not have involved himself in financial impropriety at URA. l do not know. But you cannot accuse him of stealing money from URA (which was established in 1992 and he joined ill 1994) to build a mansion in Sheema which was around in 1984. ls it a crime to be rich'!

The fact that someone is perceived to be corrupt does not mean that we can manufacture evidence against him. Politicians can be excused for employing this approach as Winnie and Nathan Byanvima did in the Brig. Jim Muhwezi censure in 1998. They got a letter written in 1992 and used it as evidence of a wrong under a constitution written in 1995. They got a house on a Shs 240m unpaid mortgage and valued it at Shs. 900m and claimed it as an asset by Muhwezi. They then published these fictitious figures to whip up public sentiment and cause parliamentary mob justice.

These public rituals called "fighting corruption" only serve the regime and actually help entrench system that thrives on corruptIon Behind the charade to censure Muhwezi, for example, was President Yoweri Museveni himself seeking to sink an ally to win public favour and stabilise his regime. Winnie Byanyima would arrange night "strategy" meetings between the president and the petitioners. But they are politicians and not judges, and many politicians by their very profession are liars. I should therefore not be misunderstood to be saying that Muhwezi, Rwakakoko, Bigirwa or Karim are saints. I am saying they deserve to be heard, they should not be accused falsely, and they deserve impartiality from a judge. We should not therefore understand Ssebutinde's style as being accidental. It is a deliberate strategy employed by the regime to appease an angry public while masking the real problems of corruption in Uganda, and at the same time serve the interests of regime survival. Ssebutinde ' herself may not be coached on how to handle the investigations. Rather, the regime exploits her unfair style to win public favour, that there is a war against corruption. Her role is therefore not to solve the problems of the organisations that she investigates but to dupe the public that something is being done, and in the process buy political capital for the regime.

Comments (46)Add Comment
Mr
written by Ron, December 15, 2011

Andrew,
I totally disagree with you on issues like homosexuality but I listen to your Andrew Mwenda Minute on Capital every morning and i am beginning to appreciate your analysis and judgement. Don't budge to being criticised, that is normal for people who decide to stand for their convictions.
It hurts how emotions can blind people from seing the real cause as looters take advantage of the "noise" and tiptoe away with thier loot smiling.
Wish you well and keep the standard.. you are not compromised!
That was 2002!! Ten years later you have definitely joined the gravy train..
written by Allan Okot, December 15, 2011
Andrew, it was indeed heartbreaking reading your defence of the ministers implicated in the oil saga.
Why do you use a piece written ten years ago to justify your anti corruption stance? 2002? How can you even
question the powers of the parliamentary commissions to investigate this? Since when have small technicalities that stand
in the way of justice, been a morally correct defence? Please Andrew, this country has bled enough. We need justice to be seen to be served. Let investigations clear the ministers but not you, Andrew Mwenda, former anti corruption investigative journalist turned capitalist turned cheerleader for the corrupt. There is nothing you can say to to the effect that you have not changed. Dont make yourself a target for us when the purge comes.

Allan Okot
It is a sincere friend who points out your forming boil
written by Kasim Sajjabi, December 15, 2011
Andrew Mwenda,
A journalistic of your calibre and international appeal should expect a spectrum of responses. While at Monitor, you used to lash out in any manner. Today, you are different from the angry , callous emotional youth of yester years. It means factors like a new sense of judgement are beginning to influence your new way of doing things. It is not surprisng that we, your ardent followers of several years cant help notice -perhaps with disappoint -that you no longer have that killer instinct. To rephrase, my personal take is you are a journalist truly come of age. We want more, go, go , go for it-Ugandans want sanity restored in this country. You Andrew Mwenda, have earned yourself a place at the high table of those who fought for good governance in Uganda-dont mess it up
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written by Lt Col Adam Kifaliso, December 15, 2011
Andrew ,are you trying to attack Judge Sebutinde ? Hiding behind corruption cases you know well , I know you have taken bribes and sold your mother land to state house, Andrew you know well what loss Queen Mother made on piece of land you arranged to be sold to m7 , she up to now crying.You also involved in the land grab in Luzira, You need to defend some so that you can also be defended , simple , who owns that title of land m7 bought with taxpayers money ?I hear now you invest in boda bodas flooding Kampala with Villagers who ride into drains killing their passengers
Simple Advice
written by Robert, December 15, 2011
Dear Andrew, critiqing you does not mean you’re hated! In my own view, like any normal person looking for money to survive, I think you lost focus. To regain the much needed focus, below are my observations; (1) You cannot work for two governments as a Presidential Advisor, then expect to perform effectively and efficiently your role as an Investigative Journalist. (2) As a business man owning and running a Media house (Independent) you’re bound to be controlled by your financiers. Andrew you know, you can not run the Independent for 2 months and be without Adverts and supplements.
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written by Robert, December 15, 2011
Therefore you’re indirectly tamed and controlled what you say, by your financiers including Dictators (eg Kagame), Corrupt politicians (eg Mbabazi) and Civil servants (eg Chris Bakiza and Jamwa) and Corporations (e.g NSSF, Crane bank). My Advice is simple, since you like money more than keeping your reputation, please STOP commenting publicly on Issues concerning Uganda and Rwanda! Concentrate on running your business and Advising President Kagame and President Museveni
Upside-down Thinking
written by Rajab Kakyama, December 15, 2011
Mwenda seems to be standing on his head. The man is wallowing in his own shadow. 2002! Mwenda you let us spend our hard earned money on reproducing an article you wrote in 2002! Why not write a history book out of your articles? Isn't this corruption? If you so think that the government used Justice Ssebutinde to dupe the public then, why can't we advance the same argument about you now? Andrew, you have your two legs to stand on, it might prove a little risky standing on your head.
Hello
written by Cuzo, December 15, 2011
I just passed by to say hello to the commentators on this page, Mwenda has nothing to write anymore and I would hardly bother myself reading this piece of history! digging from the past articles when so much is happening everyday is like eulogizing someone who is still alive! I will pass this one...
Musevenism: Emasculation of Ugandans
written by Ocheto, December 15, 2011
Going back to dig up some obscure, inarticulate pieces of claptrap writing just so that you can seem to have been consistent all along doesn't prove that you aren't just a bought hand.
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written by Capt no packing, December 16, 2011
People like Adam Kafaliso are mentally sick. They have been arguing that Mwenda has changed. That what he has been saying against false accusations, against playing to the public gallery when investigating corruption, and his calls that anti corruption efforts must follow due process as opposed to mob justice, - Kafaliso, Ocheto et al have been saying that these positions are different from those that Mwenda took when still at Monitor. He has reproduced an article from his days at Monitor showing that his position on fairness has been consistent. why cant you simply admit that you were wrong even in the face of evidence?
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written by Capt no packing, December 16, 2011
The one lesson I learn from this is that human beings are inherently incapable of admiting an error, admiting that they made a mistake even in the face of facts. In fact I can now understand why Museveni does not recognise his mistakes; why his ministers should refuse to resign even when caught with their hands in the till. If Ocheto and Kafaliso were in government, they would never yeild a position simply because the facts they had have been dispproved. So they do not oppose Museveni in principle, they only oppose him because they are not in his position. Which shows that all this cry and noise about corruption is actually not about corruption but rather who is benefiting from it.
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written by Capt no packing, December 16, 2011
The views Mwenda expressed in 2002 are similar to the views he has expressed almost 10 years later. He defended the right of Karim to be heard, the right of Bigirwa not to be accused falsely, the right of Rwakakoko and Akabway to be treated fairly, the right of Bakiza and other police officers to appear before an impartial judge etc. If i had any doubts in you Andrew, this article has removed any vesitiges of such doubt. You are the only principled Ugandan who is willing to defend a principle out of conviction, but not as an expedient instrument to score political points. It takes great moral character to defend principles.
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written by Lt Col Adam Kifaliso, December 16, 2011
Andrew having enjoyed the fruits of corruption its clear now he is afraid of ''mob justice '' , It seems Andrew has seen dark clouds coming , he wants to explain how he got all his riches in a civilised civil court, times have caught up with Andrew and likes of Capt No Parking , ''corruption is good if ill gotten is invested in the country '' Andrew said so sometime back , explains why Andrew invests in boda boda ,I wonder much of Andrew's investments are funded from Kigali.............!
Esq
written by Patson Arinaitwe, December 16, 2011
Andrew,
i do not think it is a wise decision of you to get into the arena of defending yourself on the public opinion on whether or not you've changed. why do you have too if you know you have been consistent in your thoughts and ideas on critical areas? I have followed the trend of your thoughts since your days at Capital gang in 1999. While in those yester years you came out bold and harsh, you've taken a softer approach although still critical of the same issues. i would not say you've changed, but you have grown. i would not except you to maintain the same vernom, aggressiveness and ferocious attach as you used to in your youthful days. Have you changed your ideals, not yet. But the recent trends sound worry drums.
Just admit
written by Marvin Ya Kuku, December 16, 2011
Change doesn't always have to be bad. Just admit your views are now skewed for a bevy of reasons and your integrity will not be questioned as much. Who questions fox news journalists like Bill Oreilly and yet several people agree and some even debate with him. Who cares about your consistency? As it so happens, I only read the your articles that have some sense, truth or usefulness. This Rwanda claptrap just makes me laugh at you like I do everyother ridiculous subjective journo. I rarely read such stuff as well.
Your articles about Museveni
written by Mivule Patrick, December 16, 2011
Andrew, could you also republish some articles about Museveni and his regime so that we know what has significantly changed about his leadership style to the extent that you now dine and wine with him at your leisure? What really happened, Mujuni Mwenda? Why did you make a you turn? How has your continued advice to the president helped this country to change for the better?
ANDREW YOU HAVE CHANGED A LITTLE BIT.
written by Mugisha, December 16, 2011
As someone whom you contributed massively by shaping my future "remember the Mbarara high revolution", i think in the last few years you have compromised your journalism profession by your spin doctoring for His Exc Kagame and your business interests.And that's why people have started having doubts over your opinions.
Ditch your Advisory role in Rwanda and put your businesses in the hands of professionals and you will regain your reputation.Otherwise it's going down the drain.
How many were found guilty?
written by Muhwezi, December 16, 2011
The only change in Andrew is that he is more serene. Then he was volatile. Short of that the views remain the same. At least I still remember this article. Those attacking him should ask why many of the people Sebutinde lashed out at could not be tried in a Court of law? As for the Oil documents....am still waiting for the said accounts to be traced to any bank. And if this Oil document probe goes on for more than 3 more months without tracing any hint of a bank account.....it will have done this country a disservice.
Separation and Hierachy of power and responsibility and blame
written by Ocheto, December 16, 2011
The judiciary is an important and vital part for a democracy, but it is far from being the first, in fact it is the least powerful. So it fights are usually rearguard battles. Because unlike the judiciary the power of people is rightly vested in the elected officials of government namely the parliament and the president the latter two are held most responsible and bear the most blame for the failures. Reporting claptrap and pandemonium in courts, as Mwenda does here, doesn’t represent an honest, objectivity and comprehensive accounts on the corruption culture that permeates the entire regime including its government bureaucrats.
Separation and Hierachy of power and responsibility and blame
written by Ocheto, December 16, 2011
The preeminent accountability is from the executive and the parliament. The judiciary is important but its nature it’s not proactive, but reactive. So this article is contrived as just a typical case of Mwenda dancing around the one person or persons responsible for all Uganda's problems, especially corruption.
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written by Sultan, December 17, 2011
Dear Andrew
Thank you for this reminder. You should still be grateful for a number of facts. One that Uganda is not yet dead. You will know that it's finished when constructive criticism on these columns dies down. Then you may rejoice that you have been successful. Successful in projecting your agenda and maybe damaging our children in the process. Many of us are not convinced yet; so the critiques will contninue to flow, till there's some common ground in this country. For starters Andrew, commentators do not exactly dislike you when they do not agree with you. (There's also a difference between critique and criticism) Many of them feel that you previously shared a common pedestal and may appear to be falling off. This may not necessarily be true though.
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written by Sultan, December 17, 2011
Andrew, your recently assumed role of advocacy for justice is laudable. But then this is not a monopoly for you. Even Idi Amin felt the same one time. Most, if not all decent citizens would want fairness and justice for all. But then justice is a double edged sword. Applying it one way is but a farce. You may agree on this from your comments above. One would be very puzzled if you wished to impress on anyone that those who do not agree with you in principle or otherwise are advocates for mob justice. I am sure you do not believe this yourself. Some of us are yet to see explicit expressions of mob intent or wish in any comment.
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written by Sultan, December 17, 2011
The repetitive attempts by yourself to box those you do not agree with into an undesirable category may appear smart to you; as it is easier for you to operate from a higher moral ground. But any fool can see through this so you may wish to use a different strategy!
You see, change in yourself is not important, even in the context of your writing. Punch above your weight if you wish but If you look at sociological terminology, everything changes and indeed change is but desirable. Your attempts to divert us along a certain line is a clever attempt that has failed. We can all see the obvious advocacy for justice in your writing history. But advocacy for corruption, theft, tribalism and nepotism has only crept into your writings recently. Maybe this is the change that people talk about.
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written by Sultan, December 17, 2011
Andrew, forgive those who display 'anger' against you. They are simply as vulnerable as the average Ugandan. For when they psychologically profile your language and demeanor, they feel you share an identity common with those who have raped this country dry, and deprived the future of a heritage. This, again, may not be accurate but it's simply basic instinct. Defending the indefensible abuts on the criminal and leads to assumptions of culpability. You may not get the feel of the average person on the street as you are obviously detached; but should you fault some of the responses if you take these factors into consideration? Maybe the objective tinge in your previous writing has adopted a fairly subjective negative slant. What do you think?
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written by Sultan, December 17, 2011
Andrew, the vigorous attempts by yourself to show everyone that you have not "changed" are dull, but very suspicious too.. Are you questioning basic intellect here? Change is a dynamic, measurable in time. No one can comment of change from reading a single article. It is rather from a series of observations.You have simplified the whole process to their word against yours. Is it that simple? Do you expect a people who cannot discern change to appreciate even a single sentence of your modern writing? Typical of you, you wish to write for yourself in admiration (remember Narcissus?) on the other hand, It would appear like your old and new articles are targeted for different demographic audiences (if you wish to remain the "same") Are you not indulging in an exercise in vanity?
Ssebutinde Commissions solve nothing except……
written by 3-major-reasons-why-men-dump-women, December 17, 2011
andrew has changed. thats a fact
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written by Mich, December 17, 2011
Andrew, selling yo integrity to m7 & co. s the bigest tragedy n yo career, bt we understand, u need fuel for the audi Q7!
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written by Mich, December 17, 2011
Even a 2 year old can see è difference btn the andrew of yesterday & the andrew of 2de, è former thot m7 was a villager, the latter thks he s superman!
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written by Asiimwe, December 17, 2011
Andrew, this article and the comments below it have taught me how similar to Museveni his supposed critics are. For example, if you were making the very arguments for justice and fairness in defense of Besigye, all your critics above would hail you. People who criticise Museveni for his wrongs suffer from one problem: They have a disagreement with Museveni the person, not his policies, practices and approach to problems. They do not defend an un just and unfair process, the right to due process etc when the victim is kutesa and mbabazi. If the worst injustice was promoted against someone they hate, they are happy to support it.
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written by Asiimwe, December 17, 2011
I have been asking myself: with all things going wrong in Uganda, doesnt Museveni and his group see the wrongs they are committing against our country. Then you published this old article from Monitor to show that you have always defended a just, fair and impartial process against persons accused of corruption. None of the people who were accusing you of having changed has the courage or wisdom to admit they were wrong in the face of such incotrovertible evidence. This allows me to understand why people like Kutesa, Mbabazi, Museveni, Kabakumba refuse to listen to reason even in the face of overwhelming evidence of wrong doing. Your critics are like Museveni and his group - facts just dont matter, their biases do.
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written by Asiimwe, December 17, 2011
Throughout this debate on corruption, I have been asking myself how do we build a fair and just society. It has to be through cultivating a set of values and principles to guide public actions. So your instance that justice is not for the holly but those who are accused is an obvious and commendable proposition that should be supported by all those who are angry at the unjust and unfair practices of the Museveni regime. However, it pains me that people who accuse Museveni and his regime of unfair and unjust processes are so eager to have unfair and unjust actions taken against Museveni's cabal. Justice and fairness should be for all - both friends and foes.
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written by Asiimwe, December 17, 2011
Andrew, I hope that you find it in your heart to forgive or ignore the rants of your critics above because they do not know what they are talking about. If you can defend justice for your enemy, then you trully believe in justice. Andrew, you have won by admiration from your consistent defense of these values. We cannot accuse Museveni of corruption and use corrupt means to fight him. We cannot accuse him of injustice and use unjust means to bring down his ministers - however angry we feel about them.
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written by Asiimwe, December 17, 2011
Museveni has run our country down because he lacks a moral framework, a values-system to guide his actions. He arrests opponents at a while. He protects his cronies who steal. He does not listen to alternative views. We cannot claim to be different from him and to be seeking to build a better society by acting like him. I have concluded from reading all the postings on your columns every week that those who seek to bring Museveni down are his carbon copies. The difference between him and them is that he is in power and they are not. Andrew, I pray there are Ugandans like you who see the need for particilar values to guide our politics.
Judges are appointed by President and confirmed by Parliament
written by Ocheto, December 17, 2011
The president appoints judges and the parliament confirms. So the president and parliament are equally responsible for who they put on the bench. From this article Mwenda appears to indict the judicial process as sham and the Judge as presiding over a kangaroo court proceedings. This kind of reasoning is supposed to suggest that somehow it is not the fault of Museveni's that the process doesn't meet the standards of fairness and equality under the law. But it is the president who appoints these judges and the parliament which has the oversight, so they should carry the ultimate blame for the corrupt, unjust and unfair process and outcomes.
Judges are appointed by President and confirmed by Parliament
written by Ocheto, December 17, 2011
You can't but see where the buck stops: at the appointing authorities. Mwenda now more than ever will blame everybody and everything but the authorities responsible. The whole point of the rule of law is that nobody is above the law, but here you witness the same kind of corruption within the Judiciary that pervades everywhere else in the government and its bloated bureacracy.
RUN OUT OF IDEAS
written by Mukiibi, December 18, 2011
First of all Mwenda has never had any ideas you can call his own. When I listen to his pod-casts, I can't stand him telling his over-matched co panelists quotations from all the books he has read, philosophers, economists, physicists etc. Mwenda always rumbles on to impress who ever is listening. Now if you try to be louder than his nonsense, you attract Mwenda's wrath. I remember when he called Nagenda's article criticizing M7 autocracy as less analytical. Sadly, you have now sold out instead of announcing that you are a paid adviser to M7 and Kagame dictatorships as one of the above respondents clearly stated. It's high time you come out instead of hiding behind journalism and giving it a bad name!!!!!
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written by Lt Col Adam Kifaliso, December 18, 2011
Andrew is a double agent , who is now in a mess caught between rock and hard surface, I'm afraid next people to tour his home library will his fellow local scholars from Kiseka Market
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written by The Boy, December 18, 2011
We miss the Mwenda of 2002! We have never questioned your past but we are questioning your present so i think it is not necessary for you to reproduce those articles...they are the very ones which made us your fans! U did your part to "investigate" kutesas so give us also a chance to do our investigation! You did not tell us your findings until we came out... Why? You would have just reported how you got "fake" documents and since then your investigations have proved beyond doubts that they are fake. Your failure to let your fans know this, leave us bitter and very soon we are demostrating to your offices... Be alerted!
The content though the same does not represent Uganda
written by ojfrog, December 19, 2011
To pass time debating whether Mwenda defended the corrupt or not is a waste of public human resources. One thing is clear, then (2002) and now (2012) Uganda is entrenched/soaked in corruption of increasing volumes. This country is drowning in deeply en-routed corruption that needs to be stopped. Needless to mention. It is therefore the role of the media to help expose this vice, instead they have resorted to consuming bribes from the perpetrators of corruption and today they use their influence to challenge the authority or morality with which the corrupt are handled. My question to Mwenda and his look a likes is, what side of this country are you? The one that recognizes the status quo or the one that is searching for fortune and fame by sacrificing morals. .
The content though the same does not represent Uganda
written by ojfrog, December 19, 2011
I do not need to mention the degree of corruption in the police and URA then and even now, but even under such circumstances, Mwenda bragged and continues to boast about how he has kept his stand of defending corruption suspects against mob justice. Tell me one corrupt official for whom mob justice prevailed. Jim Muhwezi and Sam Kutesa having been censured from parliament back in the years, returned as Ministers in later cabinets and there is no need to re-emphasize their current reputation (Global fund and Chogm et al) for which Mwenda will defend to death their innocence and the need to accord them a fair hearing.
The content though the same does not represent Uganda
written by ojfrog, December 19, 2011
True that Andrew i agree with you. What i donot agree with is the time, space and human resource we are wasting debating the way corruption suspects have been handled instead of the how to stop this disease that has resulted into 95% of the population living in terrible conditions with little or no access to public services for which they are taxed and have a right to. The mob justice is actually on the majority by the minority corrupt, it is your relatives in Tooro you should be defending because they have no mouth piece.
The content though the same does not represent Uganda
written by ojfrog, December 19, 2011
Rwakakoko, Kutesa, Muhwezi , Amama ARE WEALTHY AND CAN AFFORD TO DEFEND THEMSELVES IF THEY ARE REALLY INNOCENT, unless they have hired you to defend them, if not as you wish to convince us, then there is a population that requires your media space for representation; the majority poor, who unfortunately cannot pay for it!!
MWENDA HAS LOST IT
written by Mukiibi, December 20, 2011
This Mwenda has really lost it. He will be irrelevant pretty soon and the sooner the better for the majority of Ugandans. If you listen to him now, he is arguing a completely irrelevant point which is the meaning of "thief" in the Kabakumba Masiko case.
If that doesn't tell you where this man's loyalty is then you will never get it. He is laboring to tell who ever listens that in fact Kabakumba Masiko is not a thief, then he contradicts himself that "she only stole the service of USING the UBC mast illegally? So what's your point Mwenda? The more you open your corrupt mouth, the more you are becoming a "laughing stock".
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written by Mukiibi, December 20, 2011
In fact you are lucky not to live in the days of mob justice otherwise you qualify for "stoning". You are too shallow in your simplistic reasoning and because you are so self centered, and you think because people have dubbed you a motor mouth, you think you can convince them with your archaic reasoning. For your information people have seen through your treachery and they are now pouncing on your lies and deceit. Trust me I CAN ATTEST to the fact that people will spit on the land you tread for you have become even a larger enemy that M7 to the welfare of the country. Continue lying Mwenda and every time you lie, you plant a thousand haters who one day will catch up with you.
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written by ARTHUR, January 11, 2012
Bravo. Mwenda.

Am utterly disgusted by some critics' defilement of fairness and justice. it is justified and true when Mwenda reveals the dirty part of the government but he betrays the already portrayed aspects and his conscience in case of the government's goodness.Anyway, when is it correct and incorrect? Mwenda belongs to the world and not heaven.

If Mwenda is of the former, he is fair and justifeid but in case of the later, judge him as an angel or Jesus.
Thanks Andrew
written by NORBERT, January 12, 2012
Hi Andrew,
Keep up the good work.
I blame our educations system for bring out shallow minded people who pass judgement without analyzing and taking time to get evidence.
Norbert

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