Audio By Carbonatix
Uganda's military said on Monday that President Yoweri Museveni's son, a lieutenant general who stood down for what many believe to be a bid to succeed his long-ruling father, had not in fact resigned.
Muhoozi Kainerugaba announced on Twitter on March 8 that he had retired from the military after more than 20 years' service.
The move was widely interpreted as a sign that Kainerugaba, commander of the military's land forces, was preparing to enter politics on a possible path to contest the presidency in the next election in 2026.
"The general has not retired from the army, he is still in active service," Chris Magezi, spokesman for the land forces, told Reuters.
"The army promotions and the commissions board which is the military body mandated with handling retirement requests has not received his application."
Ugandan law bars serving soldiers from participating in politics. Kainerugaba, 47, has himself not said whether he wants to run for president but his supporters have been conducting online and street campaigns promoting his candidature.
Museveni, 77, Africa's fourth longest-ruling president, has long been pilloried by the opposition and rights groups for using the military to subdue his opponents through intimidation, beatings or jail terms. Officials deny the accusations.
He was declared winner against his main opponent, pop star-turned-politician Bobi Wine, after an election in January last year that was marked by violence.
Wine rejected the results as fraudulent and the United States and European Union said the polls were not free and fair.
In a sign of what critics call growing repression by Museveni's government, a prominent Ugandan author was detained in December last year and subsequently charged with communications offences related to his tweets that criticised Kainerugaba and his father.
The author, Kakwenza Rukirabashaija, has since fled to exile in Germany.
Latest Stories
-
Christina Koch becomes first woman to travel around the moon on Artemis II
10 minutes -
Epstein survivors’ calls to meet King Charles and Queen harder to ignore as US visit approaches
16 minutes -
UN Secretary-General names Ghana’s Anita Kiki Gbeho as South Sudan envoy
18 minutes -
Mali withdraws recognition of Sahrawi Republic, backs Morocco’s autonomy plan
22 minutes -
Gov’t distributes over 8,500 laptops to One Million Coders project
23 minutes -
Julius Debrah, ‘man to beat’ as NDC’s James Agbey dismisses Musah Dankwah’s polls
30 minutes -
GPRTU in Savannah Region to protest alleged eviction in Damongo
59 minutes -
Re: Reinsurance does not replace process — A response to the SIGA–SIC defence
1 hour -
Gender Ministry supports Harriet Amuzu in ongoing abuse case
1 hour -
AG joins plaintiff to scrap OSP ?: We should be mindful of the mischief in this – Bobby Banson
2 hours -
Samson Lardy Anyenini questions willingness of Attorneys-General to prosecute political colleagues
2 hours -
It is only fair the OSP is heard in Supreme Court case – Bobby Banson
2 hours -
Asiedu Nketia resumes Ashanti tour, second leg kicks off on Sunday
2 hours -
NLA denies salary cut claims, threatens legal action over reports
2 hours -
BoG Governor honoured for stabilising cedi, improve inflation
2 hours