Audio By Carbonatix
Gunmen have attacked and wounded Uganda's Transport Minister and former army commander, Gen Katumba Wamala, killing his daughter and driver.
Witnesses say men on motorbikes fired several shots at their vehicle near their home in the capital, Kampala.
Uganda's president has said "we already have clues to those killers" calling them "pigs" and "terrorists".
Soldiers are guarding the hospital where Gen Wamala is being treated for non life-threatening injuries.
He is regarded as one of Uganda's most respected politicians and military men.
The attempt on his life comes as a shock although such attacks are not rare, the BBC's Patience Atuhaire reports from Kampala.

It is not clear what the motive for the attempted killing was. The army says phone calls potentially linked to planning the assassination attempt are being investigated.
Gen Wamala was previously a police chief as well as formerly heading the army.
At the time of Tuesday's attack, he was travelling in an army vehicle that was sprayed with bullets from the sides and front.
According to a police statement, four armed men on "motorbikes with concealed number plates" had followed the car for 4km (2.5 miles) down the road from Gen Wamala's home before opening fire.
His 26-year-old daughter Brenda Nantogo and his driver, Haruna Kayondo, were "killed instantly" say police. The general's bodyguard - Khalid Koboyoit - is said to have survived with no injuries.
Video footage from the scene in Kiasasi, a suburb of Kampala, shows the former army chief visibly shaken and covered in blood - being rushed to hospital on the back of a motorbike.

Over the last few years, the country has been rocked by shootings by armed men riding on motorcycles, our correspondent says.
In June 2018, Ibrahim Abiriga, a politician and ardent supporter of President Museveni, was shot and killed near his home.
Former police spokesperson Andrew Felix Kaweesi was killed in a similar manner in April 2017 as were a magistrate and several Muslim clerics.
None of these killings has ever been successfully investigated or prosecuted.
Yet in a series of tweets on Tuesday, President Yoweri Museveni vowed to "defeat the criminals as we did in the past".
Latest Stories
-
Speaker directs business committee to schedule anti-LGBTQ bill for parliamentary consideration
15 minutes -
Inflation drop doesn’t mean prices have fallen – Oppong Nkrumah clarifies
19 minutes -
Kenya to confront Russia over ‘unacceptable’ use of its nationals in combat
21 minutes -
Running Ghana by elections, not by plans: Galamsey as the consequence
25 minutes -
Israeli theatre scholar Prof Roy Horovitz brings cultural exchange to Ghana
28 minutes -
Awula Serwaa slams Amansie Central Assembly over ‘Galamsey Tax’ defence
42 minutes -
High airport infrastructure charges making Ghana’s aviation sector uncompetitive – stakeholders
44 minutes -
Mining Indaba: African integration requires collective will – Armah-Kofi Buah
47 minutes -
Drowning in hunger: Nawuni farmers struggle to survive amidst floods and climate change
48 minutes -
15 women arrested in New Juaben South over human trafficking, sex work charges
49 minutes -
Arrest officials issuing illegal mining licences, Ashigbey demands
50 minutes -
Nyasabga’s women farmers bear the brunt of climate change and land degradation, others turn to smart agriculture
1 hour -
‘A Tax for Galamsey’: JoyNews petitions President Mahama to take action on investigative documentary
1 hour -
From Ballot Lines to Academic Laurels: Multimedia’s Akwasi Agyeman earns PhD at University of Ghana
1 hour -
Ghana’s gold refining deal could reduce commodity vulnerability – EM Advisory
1 hour
