• en
ON NOW

Ugandan President Retains Son as Head of Special Elite Unit

Yoweri Museveni Uganda’s President has reappointed his eldest son, Lieutenant General Muhoozi Kainerugaba as head of the country’s Special Forces Command, an elite unit with the responsibility of guarding the president and first family.

Yoweri Museveni Uganda’s President has reappointed his eldest son, Lieutenant General Muhoozi Kainerugaba as head of the country’s Special Forces Command, an elite unit with the responsibility of guarding the president and first family.
Gen Kainerugaba has had a meteoric rise through the ranks of the army, having trained at the British academy Sandhurst and other military programmes in the US, Egypt, and South Africa.
He also serves as presidential advisor on special operations and regains his position as head of the special forces command, after more than a decade, a move considered as part of a wider reshuffle within security agencies.
The former head of Uganda’s military operations in Somalia, Major General Paul Lokech becomes Deputy Chief of Police and has been credited for success in the fight against al-Shabab in 2011 and 2012.
The man who oversaw recent violence in Kampala and the death of more than 50 people after the arrest of presidential candidate Bobi Wine, Major General Sabiiti Muzeeyi, has been reassigned to army headquarters for redeployment.
The reshuffle comes less than a month before what is expected to be a fiercely contested presidential election, in which President Museveni is looking to extend his rule to four decades.
The Ugandan government has come under sharp criticism in the last few weeks with threats of US sanctions against some senior security officials following the killings.

Follow us on:

ON NOW