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By Alexander Luyima
A Concerned Citizen | April 2025

In April 2025, Uganda woke up to reports that Mr. Yoweri Museveni had quietly disbursed Shs100 million (CAD 35,000) to each Member of Parliament as a “token of appreciation.” This occurred while teachers, doctors, and civil servants staged strikes over unpaid wages, hospitals rationed basic supplies, and inflation crippled households. The irony is stark: a leader who once vowed to eradicate corruption now presides over a system where cash handouts to politicians are prioritized over citizens’ survival.

This is not an isolated incident—it is the culmination of a 40-year rule that has strayed far from its liberation ideals. Uganda’s descent into kleptocracy, dynastic rule, and systemic decay demands an unflinching examination of the past, the present, and the urgent steps needed to reclaim the nation’s future.

I. Broken Promises: A Legacy Betrayed

1. 1986 vs. 2025

Then: Museveni’s famous inaugural speech promised “a fundamental change” and condemned “the politics of the stomach.” He vowed to root out corruption and build strong institutions.

Now: Uganda ranks 142 out of 180 on Transparency International’s Corruption Index (2024). The State House budget for “classified expenditures” (read: patronage) ballooned to Shs800 billion in 2024, while education and health budgets were slashed.

2. The NRM’s Original Vision

The 10-Point Program (1986) emphasized democracy, security, and economic independence.

Reality Check: Uganda’s debt stands at $24.6 billion (48% of GDP), with loans funding vanity projects like the $1.2 billion Lubowa Hospital ghost project. MPs earn 20 times the national GDP per capita, yet 42% of Ugandans live below the poverty line.

3. The Monarchy-in-Making

The removal of presidential age limits (2017) and the militarization of politics—evident in Gen. Muhoozi’s political rise—confirm fears of a Museveni dynasty in the making.

II. The Shs100 Million Scandal: A Symbol of Systemic Rot

The Facts

The payments were allegedly coordinated by the Government Chief Whip and Speaker Anita Among, bypassing formal parliamentary channels.

Opposition MPs who received the money were tacitly co-opted, undermining accountability.

The Hypocrisy

In 2023, Museveni condemned “greedy leaders” during the Karamoja iron sheets scandal. Yet now, he rewards MPs with enough cash to buy 50,000 bags of maize for starving Karimojong.

The Fallout

Public trust in Parliament is at an all-time low.

Youth unemployment (64%) fuels desperation, with 78% of Ugandans under 30 believing emigration is their only hope (Afrobarometer 2024).

III. The Way Forward: A Blueprint for Change

1. Immediate Demands

Full Audit: The Auditor General must investigate the Shs100 million disbursements and publish the source of funds.

Resignations: Speaker Anita Among and the Government Chief Whip must step down pending investigations.

2. Structural Reforms

Term Limits Restored: Reinstate presidential term limits and age caps through constitutional amendment.

Anti-Corruption Courts: Fast-track trials for graft cases and enforce asset recovery from the guilty.

3. Economic Justice

Redirect Patronage Funds: The Shs100 million given to 529 MPs (Shs52.9 billion total) could:

Pay 10,000 teachers for a year.

Stock 100 health centers with malaria drugs.

Debt Transparency: Publish all loan agreements and halt non-essential borrowing.

4. The Succession Question

Museveni must renounce dynastic ambitions and commit to a free, fair 2026 election.

Civil society and youth must vet candidates based on merit, not patronage.

IV. A Call to Action

To the Ugandan People:

Document & Expose: Share evidence of corruption via secure platforms like #UgandaLeaks.

Boycott Complicity: Refuse to cheer leaders who weaponize poverty.

To the International Community:

Sanction Enablers: Target banks and offshore accounts holding Uganda’s looted wealth.

Support Civic Spaces: Protect NGOs and journalists uncovering graft.

To Mr. Museveni:

History will judge you not by your years in power but by the ruins or renaissance you leave behind. Step aside with dignity—or be remembered as the man who killed the dream of a prosperous Uganda.

Final Word

Uganda’s salvation lies not in one leader’s epiphany but in the collective courage of its people to demand better. The Shs100 million scandal is a wake-up call. Let’s answer it with unwavering resolve.

#UgandaWeWant | #TimeToGo | #NotToTheBailout

> “The price of apathy is to be ruled by evil men.” – Plato

Government & Media:

President’s Office: info@statehouse.go.ug

Parliament of Uganda: clerk@parliament.go.ug

Office of the Speaker: speaker@parliament.go.ug

Media Outlets:

Daily Monitor: news@ug.nationmedia.com | editor@ug.nationmedia.com

New Vision: news@newvision.co.ug

NBS TV: news@nbs.ug

NTV Uganda: news@ntv.co.ug

Uganda Communications Commission (UCC): ucc@ucc.co.ug

Observer Uganda: editor@observer.ug

Bukedde TV: bukedde@newvision.co.ug

Radio Simba: info@radiosimba.ug

Capital FM: capitalfm@capitalradio.co.ug

https://hoimapost.co.ug/from-liberation-to-looting-how-musevenis-uganda-lost-its-way/
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A Over Shs 24 billion Highway to Fraud » The Hoima Post –

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ROMISE: A modern, tarmacked road linking Mukono to Katosi in central Uganda, improving access and accelerating development.
REALITY: A maze of fake companies, forged documents, and missing billions.

AMOUNT LOST: Over Shs 24 billion
IMPLICATED: Abubaker Technical Services (a ghost contractor), Dan Alinange (then UNRA spokesperson), senior officials in the Ministry of Works and Transport


The Dream: Infrastructure That Connects, Develops, and Delivers

The Katosi-Mukono-Nyenga Road was touted as one of Uganda’s critical infrastructure projects—a 74-kilometre lifeline that would link rural communities along Lake Victoria to urban centers and markets. Once constructed, it would ease transport bottlenecks, improve agricultural trade, and shorten travel time between Mukono and Buikwe districts.

In 2013, the government of Uganda—through the Uganda National Roads Authority (UNRA)—announced a Shs 165 billion contract for the road’s construction. The contractor? A little-known firm named Eutaw Construction Company, allegedly from the United States, working in partnership with Abubaker Technical Services and General Supplies, a local firm.

But from the outset, red flags waved in broad daylight.


The Reality: A Highway to Nowhere

The first sign of trouble came when Eutaw Construction Company, the “lead contractor,” was discovered to not exist in any official registry of the United States. UNRA had claimed that Eutaw was selected after a competitive procurement process, beating out several established firms. But investigations later revealed that Eutaw was a phantom company, used as a front by Ugandan operatives to siphon off public funds.

Even more baffling was that Abubaker Technical Services, the local subcontractor, had no previous road construction credentials of the magnitude needed for a project of this scale—and was, in fact, not officially registered at the time of contract award.

Despite these glaring anomalies, Shs 24 billion was immediately advanced to the so-called contractors—ostensibly as mobilization fees. Within weeks, the money was gone, and the road remained untouched.


The Role of UNRA: Complicity or Incompetence?

The scandal implicates several senior figures at UNRA. At the center was Dan Alinange, the UNRA spokesperson at the time, who consistently defended the integrity of the project in public briefings. Alinange and other officials maintained that due diligence had been done and that Eutaw was “fully verified.”

But a 2015 probe by the Inspectorate of Government (IGG) found otherwise. The report revealed that UNRA deliberately ignored multiple warnings from internal auditors and whistleblowers who questioned the legitimacy of Eutaw and Abubaker Technical Services.

The report also showed that certain individuals within UNRA approved advance payments in record time—without verifying the contractor’s physical address, financial records, or previous work experience.


A Timeline of Fraud

  • 2013: Eutaw Construction Company awarded contract to build the 74km Mukono-Katosi-Nyenga Road.

  • Early 2014: Shs 24 billion paid upfront to Eutaw (later traced to Abubaker accounts).

  • Mid 2014: Site inspection reveals slow progress and lack of heavy machinery.

  • Late 2014: IGG launches investigation after whistleblower tips off Parliament.

  • 2015: Government admits Eutaw does not exist and cancels the contract.

  • 2016–2017: Project re-awarded to China Railway Group Limited; works begin afresh.


The Fallout: Who Paid the Price?

Despite the scandal’s magnitude, accountability was selective and minimal. A few low-level officials were suspended, and the contract was terminated—but no high-ranking official, including Dan Alinange, faced prosecution.

Instead, the government quietly re-awarded the project to China Railway Group Limited, which eventually completed the road in 2019. The loss of Shs 24 billion was absorbed by taxpayers. No funds were recovered from Eutaw or Abubaker.

The scandal revealed deep institutional weaknesses in procurement, internal audit bypasses, and executive protection of those involved. While the road was eventually completed, it came at double the original cost and after significant delays.


Public Outrage and Institutional Shame

The Anti-Corruption Coalition Uganda (ACCU) and other civil society organizations labeled the Katosi scandal as “a monument to impunity.” The matter was also discussed in Parliament, with MPs demanding a full audit of UNRA’s operations. However, the debate fizzled out without tangible results.

The Katosi project also triggered a broader investigation into UNRA’s procurement record, revealing over 20 ghost contractors, inflated contracts, and billions of shillings lost between 2009 and 2015.


A Pattern of Plunder

The Katosi Road scandal is not just an isolated case—it is part of a broader, systemic pattern where infrastructure projects in Uganda become vehicles for corruption. Whether it’s ghost schools, fake health centers, or vanished road contractors, public investment often ends up in private bank accounts.

In a nation where roads are lifelines, the theft of road funds is not just financial corruption—it is a theft of opportunity, a theft of development, and in many cases, a theft of life as citizens die from lack of access to emergency services due to poor road networks.


The People’s Verdict

Today, commuters drive along the completed Mukono-Katosi road unaware that it sits atop a scandal that robbed Ugandans of more than money. It robbed them of trust. It sent a clear message: in Uganda, promises are made for plunder, not progress.


Quote of the Scandal:

“We thought we were building a highway to prosperity. Instead, we built a tunnel for thieves.” — Local council leader in Mukono District


Editor’s Note:
This exposé is part of our “Roads to Ruin” series, tracking Uganda’s most scandalous infrastructure failures. If you have tips or evidence related to this story, contact our investigative desk

https://hoimapost.co.ug/ugandas-stolen-billions-the-katosi-road-project-scandal-a-over-shs-24-billion-highway-to-fraud/
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