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Tuesday 12 May 2026 11:19:17 GMT
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The abduction of former Kampala Lord Mayor Erias Lukwago has taken Uganda's political crisis to a chilling new level. Only moments after security operatives seized Lukwago, Chief of Defence Forces Muhoozi Kainerugaba took to social media with remarks that have left many Ugandans stunned. In a post widely shared online, Muhoozi appeared to boast about capturing what he called
The abduction of former Kampala Lord Mayor Erias Lukwago has taken Uganda's political crisis to a chilling new level. Only moments after security operatives seized Lukwago, Chief of Defence Forces Muhoozi Kainerugaba took to social media with remarks that have left many Ugandans stunned. In a post widely shared online, Muhoozi appeared to boast about capturing what he called "a fool," claiming he had been taken to the infamous "basement" — a place Muhoozi himself has repeatedly referenced as a torture dungeon. Even more disturbing, he suggested that photographs would be released after the victim had been tortured. If these statements are anything to go by, Uganda is witnessing something that should terrify every citizen regardless of political affiliation. How did we get here? How did a country reach a point where the commander of its armed forces can openly joke about abducting political opponents, threaten torture, and taunt the public about it on social media? The timing raises even more troubling questions. Just last week, Lukwago, acting as one of Dr. Kizza Besigye's lawyers, sued Muhoozi over threats made against Besigye's life. Now, days later, Lukwago himself is reportedly abducted by security operatives. Is this a coincidence, or is it a warning to anyone daring to challenge power? For years, Ugandans have watched as opposition figures, activists, journalists, and critics disappeared into unmarked vehicles, resurfacing days later with horrifying stories of torture and abuse. What was once denied is now being openly celebrated by some of the country's most powerful officials. This is what makes the situation so frightening. The masks are no longer even being worn. A government that abducts its critics is dangerous. A government that tortures its critics is terrifying. But a government whose top military commander appears proud of it has crossed into territory that should alarm every believer in democracy, justice, and human dignity. Today it is Lukwago. Yesterday it was Besigye. Before them it was countless others. The question every Ugandan should be asking is simple: if those with national profiles, lawyers, and public visibility can be treated this way, what protection remains for ordinary citizens? Uganda is increasingly looking less like a democracy and more like a state where power operates without fear of accountability. A country where the law bends before the wishes of powerful men. A country where critics are hunted, courts are mocked, and fear is becoming a tool of governance. We are watching institutions crumble in real time. And unless this trajectory is reversed, history may remember this period as the moment Uganda ceased pretending to be governed by the rule of law and openly embraced the rule of power.

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