High Court – The Investigator News https://theinvestigatornews.com More than Just News Mon, 29 Oct 2018 14:57:48 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.7.1 https://theinvestigatornews.com/wp-content/uploads/2018/10/cropped-ms-icon-310x310-32x32.png High Court – The Investigator News https://theinvestigatornews.com 32 32 EVICTIONS: Mr. President, posing for photos with victims before returning to comfort of State House won’t solve the problem https://theinvestigatornews.com/2018/10/evictions-mr-president-posing-for-photos-with-victims-before-returning-to-comfort-of-state-house-wont-solve-the-problem/#utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=evictions-mr-president-posing-for-photos-with-victims-before-returning-to-comfort-of-state-house-wont-solve-the-problem Mon, 29 Oct 2018 14:57:48 +0000 http://theinvestigatornews.com/?p=337 By Stephen Kasozi Muwambi

KAMPALA, Uganda: Greetings Mr. President, you have been busy visiting scenes of eviction lately. I have also seen your photos in the newspapers standing side by side with victims of land grabbing.

While I appreciate that such gestures by you Mr. President are admirable, I wish to dutifully advise that it alone cannot halt land grabbing. And I don’t want to believe that you don’t know it Mr. President.

I liked it when you visited Lusanja and empathized with locals whose village has since been turned desolate.  I also loved it when you offered tents for those people to sleep under. I can’t also forget to mention your fatherly gesture of providing flour and beans to the victims.

Much as you sympathized with the victims, there is no assurance that the so-called ‘mugagga’ behind their eviction won’t return one of these days to grab even the tents themselves. In any case, just a day after you had left Lusanja, the ‘mugagga’ showed up at the Justice Bamugemereire land probe and vowed to reclaim his land at Lusanja from the squatters that you had visited only a day earlier.

Armed with what he termed as an unquestionable land title to the land at Lusanja, the ‘mugagga’ is vowed that he will never compensate any one of the squatters because in his own words: He “duly compensated them”. I wish you were there Mr. President to witness him swearing in the face of your revered Bamugemereire.

In case you don’t know yet Mr. President, members of the police and of the military were deeply involved in the process of evicting the people at Lusanja. Strangely enough, I have not heard you condemning them for going against the government policy of safeguarding land occupants.

True, Mr. President, you provided the victims with tents, but neither did you tell them to rebuild their houses nor have ever given an unequivocal order to the ‘mugagga’ to abandon further plans of using the land.

Justice Bamugemereire is on record telling you how the ‘mugagga’ had, by razing Lusanja, disobeyed an earlier order by the land inquiry not to go ahead with the eviction. Nonetheless, I did not hear Your Excellence asserting the land inquiry authority by calling him to order.

On the contrary, like I have told you, he has since appeared at the inquiry vowing how he is going  on with his project of reclaiming the land in question without a care about the injunction Bamugemereire is talking about.

But how can a certain Kiconco dare you Mr. President in the manner he is doing it? Lest Am wrong, I know you as the Ssabalwanyi who overthrew a regime armed with all sorts of arsenal in a record five years. You have since gone on to dispatch a number of warlords to the dustbin of history.

How come then that a certain Kiconco can stand up to you and go back to his bed to sleep soundly? Have you grown so desperate Mr. President, as to be undermined by the Kiconcos of this world? When a decorated war general in Sejusa attempted to grab a government house Sir, you told him to leave and he left. Remember that Sejusa is one of the original 27 NRA rebels but he could not stand up to you when you told him to pack up and leave the government house.

Unless there are invisible hands behind Kiconco, which buzz I don’t want to believe much as the people of Lusanja cited the name of one powerful person, I have no reason to believe that a mere Kiconco who turned up at the land inquiry, in an Ipsum car even, can be that powerful as to stand up to You Sir.

But telling from the fact that Bamugemereire and his interrogators at the inquiry were careful not to bother Kiconco with ‘inconveniencing’ questions that are normally put to other witnesses, I have a feeling that the ‘mugagga’ of Lusanja isn’t alone in this project. Just thinking outside the box!

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Vietnamese purported moneyed ‘investors’ cheat Ugandan Lawyers of 1.7Bn, placed under Court Investigation https://theinvestigatornews.com/2018/10/vietnamese-purported-moneyed-investors-cheat-ugandan-lawyers-of-1-7bn-placed-under-court-investigation/#utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=vietnamese-purported-moneyed-investors-cheat-ugandan-lawyers-of-1-7bn-placed-under-court-investigation Wed, 24 Oct 2018 16:30:30 +0000 http://theinvestigatornews.com/?p=318 By Stephen Kassozi Muwambi

Another set of highly hyped foreign investors are on the spot for cheating their lawyers. The investors who allegedly arrived from Vietnam induced the Ugandan law firm of Barenzi and Company Advocates into carrying out close to 800 assignments.

The lawyers so toiled in the belief that they were working for serious as well as loaded international businessmen. They are now regretting for having been such naïve. The assignment the Barenzis carried out among others included linking the so called investors to the Ugandan President Yoweri Kaguta Museveni.

Identified as Tran Tien Dai, Dong Quang Hien and Phan Do Hahn, the trio came to Uganda claiming that they were going to trade in gold, oil and other minerals as well as manufacture of pharmaceuticals , among a range of businesses. But they ended up failing to pay rent on several occasions, prompting their landlords to threaten eviction against them.

Upon landing here in July 2014, they contacted the law firm above which started off by helping them to register a company known as Vietnam Africa Trading Limited. The men from Vietnam then proceeded to send the lawyers on several legal errands such as that of linking them to key government officials and institutions.

To be fair, the Vietnamese paid up to sometime before telling the lawyers to work without immediate payment because they could not remit more money before receiving an international investment license from the government back home. “We agreed to work but those people never paid any penny from then on,” the lawyers assert. They would give up working in July 2016 after doing donkey’s work and waiting for payment in vain.

The lawyers have resorted to courts of law seeking a total of Ugshs1, 767,675,000 in legal fees. They also seek to be paid unspecified compensation arising out of the breach of remuneration agreement besides other damages and costs of the suit. The matter has been placed before Justice Richard Wejuli of the commercial section of the High Court for investigation. The summons sent out to the Vietnamese is giving them 15 days to file their defense.

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