• Latest
  • Trending
  • All
  • News
  • BUSINESS
  • POLITICS
  • Science
  • World
  • Lifestyle
  • Tech
YES, UGANDA’S JUDICIARY HAS GONE TO THE DOGS!—LAWYER ISAAC SSEMAKADDE

YES, UGANDA’S JUDICIARY HAS GONE TO THE DOGS!—LAWYER ISAAC SSEMAKADDE

February 4, 2022
Museveni issues an Important Notice to NRM Members and Government leaders ahead of Party elections

Museveni Summons Army top Brass ahead of 2026 Elections, warns Politicians especially Youths

May 8, 2025
Court allows Consolidated Petitions in Case Challenging the Computer Misuse Act

Court allows Consolidated Petitions in Case Challenging the Computer Misuse Act

May 8, 2025
Scores suspected Dead after Passenger Bus en-route to Mbale overturns and catches Fire

Scores suspected Dead after Passenger Bus en-route to Mbale overturns and catches Fire

May 5, 2025
EC Kicks off Display of National Voters Register for Delayed process in 620 Polling Stations

EC Kicks off Display of National Voters Register for Delayed process in 620 Polling Stations

May 5, 2025
Museveni issues an Important Notice to NRM Members and Government leaders ahead of Party elections

Museveni issues an Important Notice to NRM Members and Government leaders ahead of Party elections

May 4, 2025
President Museveni Hails Cordial relations between Uganda and Japan

President Museveni Hails Cordial relations between Uganda and Japan

May 2, 2025
Uganda Human Rights Commission Orders Gen. Muhoozi to Release Eddie Mutwe

Uganda Human Rights Commission Orders Gen. Muhoozi to Release Eddie Mutwe

May 2, 2025
FUFA Elections Committee Declares 69 Duly Elected Assembly Delegates 2025-29

FUFA Elections Committee Declares 69 Duly Elected Assembly Delegates 2025-29

April 30, 2025
17 Kyambogo University Students Suspended for Protesting Controversial Surcharge on tuition

17 Kyambogo University Students Suspended for Protesting Controversial Surcharge on tuition

April 30, 2025
FUFA Elections: 56 Out of 88 Delegates Stand Unopposed, Magogo remains Unchallenged

FUFA Elections: 56 Out of 88 Delegates Stand Unopposed, Magogo remains Unchallenged

April 29, 2025
SAD: Retired Police officer Sam Omala has passed away

SAD: Retired Police officer Sam Omala has passed away

April 28, 2025
2 Ministers and 4 MPs in Hot Soup for Failure to Declare Their Wealth

IGG orders Interdiction of Lands Commissioner Over Alleged Fraudulent Cancelation and Transfer of Titles

April 25, 2025
  • About
  • Advertise
  • Privacy & Policy
  • Contact
Friday, May 9, 2025
  • Login
Sabasaba Updates
  • Home
    • Home – Layout 1
    • Home – Layout 2
    • Home – Layout 3
    • Home – Layout 4
    • Home – Layout 5
  • News
    • All
    • Science
    • World
    Court allows Consolidated Petitions in Case Challenging the Computer Misuse Act

    Court allows Consolidated Petitions in Case Challenging the Computer Misuse Act

    KASSANDA: Defence Chairman on the run for Killing Wife with whom they share 14 Children

    KASSANDA: Defence Chairman on the run for Killing Wife with whom they share 14 Children

    Dr Atingi-Ego named new Governor Bank of Uganda

    Dr Atingi-Ego named new Governor Bank of Uganda

    Groundbreaking Ebola Vaccination trial launched in Uganda

    Groundbreaking Ebola Vaccination trial launched in Uganda

    Veteran politician Dr Frank Nabwiso dies at the age of 84

    Tentative burial program for the Late Dr Frank Nabwiso released

    Kampala: Security in Bus Park intercepts Man with a loaded Machine Gun, Pangas and Petrol

    Kampala: Security in Bus Park intercepts Man with a loaded Machine Gun, Pangas and Petrol

    Singer Alien Skin finally granted bail

    Singer Alien Skin finally granted bail

    Singer Alien Skin Wanted over charges of Assault involving Nsambya Hospital staff

    Singer Alien Skin Wanted over charges of Assault involving Nsambya Hospital staff

    Education Ministry orders Expulsion, Deletion of teachers who Spend school time riding Bodabodas, frying Chapati

    Education Ministry orders Expulsion, Deletion of teachers who Spend school time riding Bodabodas, frying Chapati

    Kigali: Police arrest Miss Rwanda for Drunken Driving

    Kigali: Police arrest Miss Rwanda for Drunken Driving

    Trending Tags

    • Donald Trump
    • Future of News
    • Climate Change
    • Market Stories
    • Election Results
    • Flat Earth
  • Tech
    • All
    • Apps
    • Gear
    • Mobile
    • Startup

    Rap group call out publication for using their image in place of ‘gang’

    Meet the woman who’s making consumer boycotts great again

    New campaign wants you to raise funds for abuse victims by ditching the razor

    Twitter tweaks video again, adding view counts for some users

    A beginner’s guide to the legendary Tim Tam biscuit, now available in America

    India is bringing free Wi-Fi to more than 1,000 villages this year

    Betterment moves beyond robo-advising with human financial planners

    People are handing out badges at Tube stations to tackle loneliness

    Trump’s H-1B Visa Bill spooks India’s IT companies

    Oil spill off India’s southern coast leaves fisherman stranded, marine life impacted

    Trending Tags

    • Flat Earth
    • Sillicon Valley
    • Mr. Robot
    • MotoGP 2017
    • Golden Globes
    • Future of News
  • Entertainment
    • All
    • Gaming
    • Movie
    • Music

    Miss Uganda finalist Sureya Umeimah confidently eying the prize: PICTORIAL

    Sureya Umeimah: the Cadet Pilot contesting for Miss Uganda 2024

    Top Ugandan Artistes in tears after being denied UK Visas to London

    New campaign wants you to raise funds for abuse victims by ditching the razor

    A beginner’s guide to the legendary Tim Tam biscuit, now available in America

    People are handing out badges at Tube stations to tackle loneliness

    Magical fish basically has the power to conjure its own Patronus

    This Filipino guy channels his inner Miss Universe by strutting in six-inch heels and speedos

    Oil spill off India’s southern coast leaves fisherman stranded, marine life impacted

    You can now play Bill Gates’ first PC game and run over donkeys on your iPhone, Apple Watch

  • Lifestyle
    • All
    • Fashion
    • Food
    • Travel
    Train Services Between Kampala and Mukono Temporarily Suspended Due to Track Failure

    Train Services Between Kampala and Mukono Temporarily Suspended Due to Track Failure

    Banished from Home, Rejected by Family, Serujja still stands for his Rights

    Banished from Home, Rejected by Family, Serujja still stands for his Rights

    OpED: The Staple that Threatens the Future: Unraveling Uganda’s Environmental Reckoning

    The Shameful face of Self-Serving Philanthropy: Exploiting the Vulnerable for Fame and Fortune

    Mukono’s Ghetto Children Celebrate Christmas early in a Rare ‘Feast of Hope’

    Mukono’s Ghetto Children Celebrate Christmas early in a Rare ‘Feast of Hope’

    The Last Piece of the Jigsaw: Dr. Moses Byaruhanga’s remarkable Career in Pursuing Justice

    Sureya Umeimah: the Cadet Pilot contesting for Miss Uganda 2024

    Rap group call out publication for using their image in place of ‘gang’

    Meet the woman who’s making consumer boycotts great again

    New campaign wants you to raise funds for abuse victims by ditching the razor

    Twitter tweaks video again, adding view counts for some users

    Trending Tags

    • Golden Globes
    • Mr. Robot
    • MotoGP 2017
    • Climate Change
    • Flat Earth
No Result
View All Result
Sabasaba Updates
No Result
View All Result
Home NATIONAL

YES, UGANDA’S JUDICIARY HAS GONE TO THE DOGS!—LAWYER ISAAC SSEMAKADDE

by Apollo Tusiime
February 4, 2022
in NATIONAL, POLITICS
0
YES, UGANDA’S JUDICIARY HAS GONE TO THE DOGS!—LAWYER ISAAC SSEMAKADDE

Lawyer Isaac Ssemakadde; Courtesy Photo

492
SHARES
1.4k
VIEWS
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter

By Isaac Ssemakadde
Kampala, 4 February 2022

IN RESPONSE TO THE FEB 1 STATEMENT BY UGANDA JUDICIAL OFFICERS ASSOCIATION (UJOA) AND FEB 3 RESOLUTION OF THE 23RD JUDGES CONFERENCE ON ALLEGED CYBERBULLYING OF UNDISCLOSED COLLEAGUE(S)

The bizarre statement issued by Uganda Judicial Officers Association (UJOA) on February 1, confirms our indelible criticism that the Uganda Judiciary has gone to the dogs.

Full of grammatical and stylistic errors, and based on overly broad and unproven allegations, UJOA’s 160-word statement smacks of prejudice, incompetence, intolerance, narrow-mindedness and a penchant for tyranny, censorship and low-key colonialism.

We urgently need RADICAL SURGERY of the institution, including fresh vetting of its current members—especially those irredeemably bent cadres who believe they are untouchable, infallible and invincible, because they are protected by the junta.

To condemn an Advocate who is qualified to be a Judge of the High Court, an award-winning member of the Uganda Law Society, before making the necessary consultations, without due process, and in total disregard of the principle of a fair hearing, is the lowest of the low—it just doesn’t get any lower than that!

Mob justice is now the official policy of the Uganda Judiciary. Due process is a thing of the past, an irritant not to be observed once the Judiciary perceives an attack on one of its members.

The same message was also sent out yesterday through another bizarre resolution on ‘zero tolerance to cyberbullying of judges’. It was reached after the week-long sessions of this year’s judges’ conference at the posh Nsambya-based Mestil Hotel.

But, of course, the resolution is unacceptable at best, and laughable at worst.

Unacceptable

The constitutionality of the offence of cyberbullying or cyber harassment is sub judice, i.e. pending a decision of the Constitutional Court in several cases including Uganda Law Society v Attorney General, Petition No 1 of 2019.

We therefore don’t know how the judges arrived at a working definition of ‘cyberbullying’.

What examples did they cite of the gravity and frequency of such incidents in the past, so that we can be convinced that this is a pressing and substantial issue of national importance? Aren’t judicial processes supposed to be transparent, impartial and proven beyond doubt?

The resolution is also in bad taste since the sweeping charge of ‘cyberbullying’ is the modern tool of choice for the political persecution of dissenting voices in Uganda.

But now that the judiciary has thrown concerns of sub judice to the wind, and formally entered the business of political persecution, thus allying itself with the forces of tyranny, exploitation and oppression, isn’t radical surgery of the judiciary inevitable, if we are to restore public confidence?

Analogue, colonial judges

The resolution is laughable because it depicts our judiciary as digitally stunted, much like the biblical example of Lot’s wife (Genesis 19:26).

The judicial officers of Uganda should adapt to the new digital order enthusiastically, not only by decolonizing and digitalizing their processes, but also being the best example of how to exercise maximum restraint when criticised online.

In short, if the judges want to pry into our online conversations, they should first grow much thicker skin, consistent with the community standards of our favourite social networks. Otherwise they are in for a rude awakening!

Obviously, like Lot’s wife, most of them are still stuck in the colonial-analogue era of unbridled judicial tyranny, exploitation and oppression of the ‘captured, primitive natives’ — which is a pity, because well…Judge Judy happened.

Shielding rotten tomatoes

With the People as our shield, and social justice our spear, we are constitutionally justified to step on the toes of tyrannical judges and magistrates, using social media and other digital innovations, to remind these high priests and freemasons that they are in reality oath-bound servants of the People.

Social accountability mechanisms, such as judicial watch apps and social media networks, are feared by errant judges and magistrates—the rotten tomatoes—for this very reason.

Traditionally, rotten tomatoes in the judiciary have been able to hide behind the thick red tape of colonial decorum, analogue formalism and excessive proceduralism to commit unspeakable crimes against the People—with impunity.

But the digital pivot has radically upset the status quo. It has equipped all citizens (including the meek and illiterate) with readily affordable and accessible means of enforcing judicial accountability, without the burden of red tape.

Suddenly every Kajubi, Okello and Mugisha can become an active participant in the war against judicial malpractice—simply by clicking, swiping, liking, sharing, retweeting, etc. They don’t even have to comment.

We should therefore be very distrustful of, and actively resist, any cleverly-crafted resolution or statement by unelected high priests and freemasons, which will in effect shield the judiciary’s rotten tomatoes from exposure. This is not how democracy works.

Judicial office is not immune from scandal. Judges are not infallible or immortal lords, and court decorum doesn’t mean that they are above trenchant or caustic criticism on the digital streets.

The cat is already out of the bag.

The People are wiser, braver and more empowered these days.

Long jail sentences, astronomical fines, terse warnings and other mysterious sanctions will no longer deter anyone from the patriotic duty of exposing and combating judicial corruption.

But these excesses will certainly embarrass the judiciary, and lower its standing in society. Classic own goal!

Voyeurs and fragile flowers

As custodians of our Constitution, judicial officers of Uganda must caution themselves against curating the wrong image in the digital era.

Judges and magistrates have no business conducting digital surveillance, scouring the Internet in search of dissenting or critical voices. That’s the preoccupation of tyrannical regimes, the one we are determined to topple.

Entrusted with the high duty of midwifing a constitutional democracy from a colonial contraption, judicial officers in the 21st century should be careful not to present themselves as obsessive voyeurs prying into our social media lives, or fragile flowers which wilt in the heat of cyber-criticism.

The newly appointed ones should especially desist from ‘chamber bullying’, mob justice and other acts of intimidation and harassment of critical court users.

The people of Uganda don’t need the help of judicial officers in assessing acceptable and unacceptable ideas.

We are intellectually mature enough to conduct unmoderated, unpoliced, unsurveilled and unmonitored discussions in our homes, streets and workplaces.

Try to clear these phantoms from your heads and grasp the reality that we live in a constitutional democracy now, not the Queen’s colony or Tyrant’s hamlet.

Swept under the carpet

The Ostrich head-in-the-sand posture taken by both UJOA and the 23rd judges’ conference is irresistibly comical, if not absurd.

What is the fundamental challenge being faced by the judiciary or the practice of law in Uganda today, and whose duty is it to fix it?

Also, if the one with the duty of fixing it is not doing so, whose role is it to call them to account?

Who will bell the cat?

These are the issues that our esteemed judges feared to discuss openly (inside the police barracks at Nsambya), as Uganda continues to bleed from the yoke of militarism, surveillance and repression.

Cowardly but wanting to look tough and relevant at the same time, the judicial officers of Uganda opted for old-fashioned petite bourgeois petulance.

By picking on a secondary target (an outspoken legal rebel) to deflect from tackling the fundamental issues and the real enemy whom they actually fear (a tone-deaf military tyrant), the lethargic, opportunistic and careerist Benchwarmers (hiding behind closed doors) shamelessly recast criticism of their ilk as an issue of ‘cyberbullying’ — without even sparing a thought for the myriad genuine but less privileged victims of physical bullying (torture) whom they lock out of justice on a daily.

A strange case of judicial gonorrhoea

The purpose of a justice system is to streamline dispute resolution and make personal solutions unnecessary, so as to preclude the attendant personal abuse and malevolence.

So if you defeat the justice system, by neglecting your constitutional duty to protect the People against marauding forces of tyranny, oppression and exploitation, it does not make sense to complain (while using state resources moreover) about ad hominem attacks.

The Baganda have a saying: ‘GULUMA YAGUZZA, ENZIKU TTERUMA KKUNDI’ — meaning that gonorrhoea (a sexually transmitted disease) rarely harms the navel.

How did a legal rebel collectively offend all the Judicial Officers of Uganda by tweeting about the anatomy of a single judge?

By the way, does the size of a judge’s penis or brain merit discussion and resolution in a week-long judicial conference?

What does this reveal about the state of our judiciary today?

Accordingly, I find the grumblings from UJOA and the 23rd annual judges’ conference misconceived, frivolous and vexatious, and I urge right-thinking members of society to dismiss them with contempt.

The author is a Lawyer, Human Rights Activist and refers to himself as Legal Rebel

EDITORS NOTE: In the 1st February statement, Uganda Judicial Officers Association-UJOA condemned what they term as unbecoming utterances by Isaac Semakadde and Hassan Male Mabirizi Kiwanuka, both city lawyers who they accuse of using social media to insult judges.

The statement signed by the Association president Tadeo Asiimwe, condemns the utterances from lawyers who are aware of the established mechanisms for addressing dissatisfaction with court decisions. Mr Asiimwe urges the Uganda Law Society and the Law Council to take necessary steps to tame the “irreverent behavior” which he says severely impacts on the judicial officers in the performance of their official duties.

To advertise on this website or send a story for publishing please send mail to prince.apol@yahoo.com or call 0701609906

Share197Tweet123
Apollo Tusiime

Apollo Tusiime

Multi-media Journalist, PR professional and Thinker.

Sabasaba Updates

Copyright © 2024 Sabasaba Updates.

Navigate Site

  • About
  • Advertise
  • Privacy & Policy
  • Contact

Follow Us

Welcome Back!

Login to your account below

Forgotten Password?

Retrieve your password

Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

Log In
error: Content is protected !!
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • News
    • Politics
    • Business
    • World
    • Science
  • Entertainment
    • Gaming
    • Music
    • Movie
    • Sports
  • Tech
    • Apps
    • Gear
    • Mobile
    • Startup
  • Lifestyle
    • Food
    • Fashion
    • Health
    • Travel

Copyright © 2024 Sabasaba Updates.