{UAH} MISSION ACCOMPLISHED - MAJ. MUGIZI RETURNS FROM 'EXILE'
MISSION ACCOMPLISHED - MAJ. MUGIZI RETURNS FROM 'EXILE'
When Gen. Ssejusa fled to London in 2013 and then returned to Uganda in December 2014, many gullible Ugandans argued that he had been on a spy mission on Ugandan exiles in the UK. However, the events that have followed his return have exonerated him and he is now vowed by Ugandans as one of the parrots who may rescue them from the claws of Museveni's dictatorship. However, for those who are craving to know what a real spy is, here below find the short script:-
Major Tom Mugizi served under Military Intelligence in the late 1980s and early 1990s when it was still called DMI and housed at Basiima House. The highest he rose under M.I was to become a Division Intelligence Officer and was at one time the 3rd Div. I.O based in Mbale. He opportunistically left DMI and went to serve under the Directorate of Supplies. In the mid 1990s he did a Diploma in Law at the Law Development Centre in Kampala. Following the rigged 2001 general elections and the political persecution that ensued, Col. Kyakabale and company fled to Rwanda from where they declared war on the Museveni regime. The then director General of Internal Security, Henry Tumukunde infiltrated the Rwanda based group of dissidents by planting in it Maj. Tom Mugizi and Captain Muhammad Kiwanuka. The two made contact with the internal contacts of the dissident group who facilitated their travel to Rwanda and joined the dissident group. What surprised his colleagues there is the level of preparedness that Maj. Tom Mugizi had made - he had moved from Uganda armed with maps for military purposes!
Later, the group was relocated to Eastern DRC with the aim of establishing bases. From eastern DRC, Maj. Mugizi and Capt. Kiwanuka supplied intelligence that enabled the the Museveni regime using the Congolese rebel group and Gen. Bosco Ntaganda to attack, overran, kill and capture some Ugandan dissidents. Among the captives that were handed over to Gen. Kayihura were Maj. Mugizi and Capt. Kiwanuka. Upon arrival in Kampala, as other captives were being detained, tortured and interrogated, the two were separated from the group and kept at a safe house in Makindye. They spent months in this safe house that was housed in a house owned by Museveni's son Brig. Muhoozi near the Magistrate's court next to Brig. Kasirye Gwanga's controversial residential house. Earlier on, this same house had been used by CMI as a safe house for Rwanda's Maj. Alphonse Fuluma before he was relocated to the USA.
Later on, Maj. Mugizi was deployed to the passport control office to with the task of monitoring the suspected illicit acquisition of 5ravel documents by suspected dissidents. Captain Kiwanuka was deployed to the Anti-Stoc Unit in Karamoja. At the time, opposition leader, Dr. Besigye was in exile in South Africa and the regime believed that with improved relations withheld Rwanda, South Africa was becoming the major host of Ugandan dissidents. Maj. Mugizi was again assigned to proceed to South Africa and infiltrate the groups there. In South Africa, he successfully carried out his assignment rising to become the Chairman of opposition FDC South Africa Chapter thus neutealising the once vibrant South Africa based vibrant anti- Museveni political activism. That is how as opposition activists have been carrying out successfull protests in major capitals of the world, those in South Africa remained dormant. On the other hand, Capt Kiwanuka was arrested and detained without trial around 2005 over charges of swindling money meant to pay the auxiliary forces in Karamoja.
This week the Museveni regime's Chief of Military Intelligence paraded Maj. Mugizi as a returnee from exile who in turn also made an appeal for other exiles to return home. Depending on which angle you are standing, you may view Maj. Mugizi as either a patriot or a traitor. He is not the first and last traitor to return and rejoin the dictatorial military regime. A decade ago, one of the Kigali based dissidents under Col. Kyakabale, Lt. Richard Bakarweha struck a deal with the regime to return from Sweden where he had been relocated after relations with Kigali had improved. Recently, Col Kyakabale himself returned from exile in Sweden. Maj. Mugizi's case differs from others in that while others had genuine reasons for fleeing and personal reasons for returning, he left the country twice on a purely spy mission. At the next national public function, the regime will award him with a medal for distinguished service.
INFORMATION IS POWER.
Major Tom Mugizi served under Military Intelligence in the late 1980s and early 1990s when it was still called DMI and housed at Basiima House. The highest he rose under M.I was to become a Division Intelligence Officer and was at one time the 3rd Div. I.O based in Mbale. He opportunistically left DMI and went to serve under the Directorate of Supplies. In the mid 1990s he did a Diploma in Law at the Law Development Centre in Kampala. Following the rigged 2001 general elections and the political persecution that ensued, Col. Kyakabale and company fled to Rwanda from where they declared war on the Museveni regime. The then director General of Internal Security, Henry Tumukunde infiltrated the Rwanda based group of dissidents by planting in it Maj. Tom Mugizi and Captain Muhammad Kiwanuka. The two made contact with the internal contacts of the dissident group who facilitated their travel to Rwanda and joined the dissident group. What surprised his colleagues there is the level of preparedness that Maj. Tom Mugizi had made - he had moved from Uganda armed with maps for military purposes!
Later, the group was relocated to Eastern DRC with the aim of establishing bases. From eastern DRC, Maj. Mugizi and Capt. Kiwanuka supplied intelligence that enabled the the Museveni regime using the Congolese rebel group and Gen. Bosco Ntaganda to attack, overran, kill and capture some Ugandan dissidents. Among the captives that were handed over to Gen. Kayihura were Maj. Mugizi and Capt. Kiwanuka. Upon arrival in Kampala, as other captives were being detained, tortured and interrogated, the two were separated from the group and kept at a safe house in Makindye. They spent months in this safe house that was housed in a house owned by Museveni's son Brig. Muhoozi near the Magistrate's court next to Brig. Kasirye Gwanga's controversial residential house. Earlier on, this same house had been used by CMI as a safe house for Rwanda's Maj. Alphonse Fuluma before he was relocated to the USA.
Later on, Maj. Mugizi was deployed to the passport control office to with the task of monitoring the suspected illicit acquisition of 5ravel documents by suspected dissidents. Captain Kiwanuka was deployed to the Anti-Stoc Unit in Karamoja. At the time, opposition leader, Dr. Besigye was in exile in South Africa and the regime believed that with improved relations withheld Rwanda, South Africa was becoming the major host of Ugandan dissidents. Maj. Mugizi was again assigned to proceed to South Africa and infiltrate the groups there. In South Africa, he successfully carried out his assignment rising to become the Chairman of opposition FDC South Africa Chapter thus neutealising the once vibrant South Africa based vibrant anti- Museveni political activism. That is how as opposition activists have been carrying out successfull protests in major capitals of the world, those in South Africa remained dormant. On the other hand, Capt Kiwanuka was arrested and detained without trial around 2005 over charges of swindling money meant to pay the auxiliary forces in Karamoja.
This week the Museveni regime's Chief of Military Intelligence paraded Maj. Mugizi as a returnee from exile who in turn also made an appeal for other exiles to return home. Depending on which angle you are standing, you may view Maj. Mugizi as either a patriot or a traitor. He is not the first and last traitor to return and rejoin the dictatorial military regime. A decade ago, one of the Kigali based dissidents under Col. Kyakabale, Lt. Richard Bakarweha struck a deal with the regime to return from Sweden where he had been relocated after relations with Kigali had improved. Recently, Col Kyakabale himself returned from exile in Sweden. Maj. Mugizi's case differs from others in that while others had genuine reasons for fleeing and personal reasons for returning, he left the country twice on a purely spy mission. At the next national public function, the regime will award him with a medal for distinguished service.
INFORMATION IS POWER.
Viele GruBe
Robukui
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