Monday, 3 June 2019
UGANDA: Why Museveni is missing at the Wakiso murder scene (PHOTOS)
WHY MUSEVENI IS MISSING AT THE WAKISO MURDER SCENE
CHANGE OF GUARDS - Following the rampant mysterious gruesome murders that have of recent been experienced in the country, Museveni made it a habit to visit the scenes of crime and in some cases immediately after the incident. On several occasions, he was seen giving instructions to police officers while in other instances he interviewed witnesses and arrested suspects. This is called micromanagement where such a top executive wants to take credit for every success instead of delegating. Scenes of crime are managed by experts called Scene of Crime Officers (SOCO).
Following his 'mismanagement' of the Hon. Abiriga's murder scene of crime, on June 14, 2018 this website ran an article titled;
WHY WOULD A HEAD OF STATE MANAGE A CRIME SCENE? In the same article we highlighted his past incidents of his 'mismanagement' of scenes of crime;
"Museveni (pictured) also visited one of the scenes of crime (murder of women) and interviewed local residents as he personally took down notes. He later informed the press thus; …. the Wanainchi gave me valuable information; we shall apprehend those behind these killings. I will fight Wakiso women killers using a pen and paper.” He went on to blame the police thus; “But police have been using backward methods. We are going to solve this including new technology such as DNA to investigate. We shall also install CCTV cameras in major cities to ease police work."
In September 2018 he appeared at the murder scene of Police Officer Muhammad Kirumira a short while after. However, this time round he was humiliated by an angry grieving crowd of locals;
“Mzee, see this? We are tired of it. We are tired of you and your men in uniform. We want you to take action. People are getting finished, what will you rule, an empty country?” someone in the crowd shouted.
His SFC swung into action and dispersed the crowds, journalists were ordered to switch of their cameras, and the live coverage of the crime scene was stopped. About 40 minutes later, President Museveni gathered around a few people, asked them what happened. Two eyewitnesses were brought forward, he ordered the security to put them into his car, and they were dragged in with their shirts off.”
In October 2018 during the launch of the multi-billion shillings CCTV project, he said;
“NRM has sorted many problems. With this [CCTV cameras], we shall also sort the problem of boda bodas, as long as we have the eyes, ears and the nose in the right place. It is going to be much simpler of the problems I have dealt with in this last 50 years of my time,” he said.
Using the idiom ‘looking for a needle in haystack’, he said that as sophisticated as some criminal activities may seem, it is possible to solve them, relying on good intelligence.
“This is not a war, it is not serious. It’s just intelligence. Once we know you, you have no capacity to resist us; your game is finished. It’s not like when we were fighting Kony or Al-Shabaab. With the installation of Closed Circuit Television (CCTV) cameras in urban areas, "the game is finished for city criminals who can be monitored from near and far, during the day and night, before and after crime."
Unfortunately, the CCTV cameras were designed more for monitoring opposition crowds build up in anticipation for mass protests than dealing with serious crime in the city. Since the launch, a number of gruesome murders and armed robberies have taken place in the heart of the city. The latest incident was last week where armed robbers staged a daylight robbery at a hardware shop in the Nansana area where they shot dead two people, fatally injured several others before taking off with hundreds of millions of shillings.
An eye witness account describes the incident thus;
".....three motorcycles stormed the place before 2pm, and grounded motorized traffic on either side to a halt.
A pair advanced inside the hardware shop as cover fire rang from outside. One reportedly asked: “where is the manager, where is the money?”
Assistant manager Atikuru approached and he was shot dead when he said there was no cash at the place. His colleague Aruho was also gunned when he offered a similar response, prompting other workers to scamper to safety. There was pandemonium outside where one of the assailants, who fired indiscriminately, positioned strategically at a nearby fuel station after cordoning off the area. The thugs were wearing masks, came at a time when the cashiers were about to take money to the bank."
There is no doubt, the attack was executed in a military style. They were not bothered by the extension of CCTV cameras network in this particulars area, the Police station being located roughly a kilometre away and the presence of armed private guards at nearby business premises. The police only appeared at the scene of crime 30 minutes later after the assailants had fled unchallenged. Museveni and the entire regime infrastructure have gone silent over the matter because they have no explanation to give. Museveni can't dare stepping in Wakiso for fear of a repeat of what happened at Kirumira's murder scene but more so after much chest stamping over installation of CCTV cameras.
INFORMATION IS POWER AND THE PROBLEM OF UGANDA IS MUSEVENISM
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