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Thursday 16 April 2026 10:12:47 GMT
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The closure of Nation Media Group (NMG) Uganda operations marks a major escalation in tensions between the Ugandan government/military and independent media. On or around June 28, 2026, security forces, acting on orders linked to Gen. Muhoozi Kainerugaba (CDF and son of President Museveni), raided and sealed off NMG premises housing Daily Monitor, NTV Uganda, Spark TV, KFM, and Dembe FM. Staff faced restrictions, broadcasts and printing halted, and the managing director reportedly faced threats. This followed Muhoozi’s public statements criticizing the outlets and asserting control over their reopening.  Canary Mugume, a prominent NBS TV journalist and anchor known for investigative work, covered the developments closely. He expressed sympathy for affected NMG staff, highlighting the human cost job losses, uncertainty, and threats to press freedom. He reported on the military siege and later detailed a meeting between NMG owners and the CDF. According to his posts citing a UPDF website blog, Muhoozi complained about “biased and unbalanced reporting” by NTV and Monitor. NMG owners allegedly committed to a more “patriotic, balanced, and objective” approach going forward. Mugume also noted President Museveni’s upcoming national address. Solomon Kampala, an active Ugandan youth voice on X with a significant following, sharply criticized Mugume’s reporting. In direct replies, he accused Mugume of allowing himself to be used as a “puppet” by relaying the UPDF’s narrative without sufficient pushback or balance. Kampala argued that publishing the CDF’s version especially from the same figure who ordered the shutdown undermines journalism. He pointed out omissions like condemnations from Reporters Without Borders (RSF) and the Committee to Protect Journalists (CPJ), plus Muhoozi’s past statements doubting free press. Kampala questioned what independent journalism means when its terms are dictated by those who can shut it down at will. The exchange highlights deeper divides in Ugandan media and public discourse. Mugume pushed back, asking Kampala to clarify his point and correcting how he should be addressed. Kampala doubled down in a detailed response, framing the issue as one of journalistic integrity under pressure: conforming to power for “momentary security” versus upholding purpose and truth-telling. Supporters on both sides engaged heavily, with some defending Mugume’s factual reporting of official statements and others praising Kampala for calling out perceived self-censorship or regime alignment. This reflects broader debates some see NMG as oppositional or unbalanced, while critics view the closure as authoritarian overreach against independent voices.
The closure of Nation Media Group (NMG) Uganda operations marks a major escalation in tensions between the Ugandan government/military and independent media. On or around June 28, 2026, security forces, acting on orders linked to Gen. Muhoozi Kainerugaba (CDF and son of President Museveni), raided and sealed off NMG premises housing Daily Monitor, NTV Uganda, Spark TV, KFM, and Dembe FM. Staff faced restrictions, broadcasts and printing halted, and the managing director reportedly faced threats. This followed Muhoozi’s public statements criticizing the outlets and asserting control over their reopening. Canary Mugume, a prominent NBS TV journalist and anchor known for investigative work, covered the developments closely. He expressed sympathy for affected NMG staff, highlighting the human cost job losses, uncertainty, and threats to press freedom. He reported on the military siege and later detailed a meeting between NMG owners and the CDF. According to his posts citing a UPDF website blog, Muhoozi complained about “biased and unbalanced reporting” by NTV and Monitor. NMG owners allegedly committed to a more “patriotic, balanced, and objective” approach going forward. Mugume also noted President Museveni’s upcoming national address. Solomon Kampala, an active Ugandan youth voice on X with a significant following, sharply criticized Mugume’s reporting. In direct replies, he accused Mugume of allowing himself to be used as a “puppet” by relaying the UPDF’s narrative without sufficient pushback or balance. Kampala argued that publishing the CDF’s version especially from the same figure who ordered the shutdown undermines journalism. He pointed out omissions like condemnations from Reporters Without Borders (RSF) and the Committee to Protect Journalists (CPJ), plus Muhoozi’s past statements doubting free press. Kampala questioned what independent journalism means when its terms are dictated by those who can shut it down at will. The exchange highlights deeper divides in Ugandan media and public discourse. Mugume pushed back, asking Kampala to clarify his point and correcting how he should be addressed. Kampala doubled down in a detailed response, framing the issue as one of journalistic integrity under pressure: conforming to power for “momentary security” versus upholding purpose and truth-telling. Supporters on both sides engaged heavily, with some defending Mugume’s factual reporting of official statements and others praising Kampala for calling out perceived self-censorship or regime alignment. This reflects broader debates some see NMG as oppositional or unbalanced, while critics view the closure as authoritarian overreach against independent voices.

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