President’s Son Shuts Down Major Newspaper, Broadcast Station


*They Will Not Reopen Till I Say So, He Orders

Uganda’s military chief, who is also the President’s son, said on Sunday he had ordered the closure of two ​leading media outlets, declaring that he did “not believe in ‌a free press.”

Muhoozi Kainerugaba said the Daily Monitor – Uganda’s largest independent daily newspaper – and NTV Uganda, one of the country’s largest private broadcasters, would “not re-open ​without my permission”.

“In Uganda, I do not believe in ​a free press! The press should be guided by cadres ⁠of the revolution,” Kainerugaba wrote in a series of posts ​on X.

He did not give specific reasons for closing ​the media outlets, both of which are owned by Nation Media Group (NMG), a media conglomerate headquartered in Kenya and listed on the Nairobi Stock Exchange.

The ​ Daily Monitor reported on Sunday that military personnel had been deployed ​at NMG’s premises in the capital, Kampala, and that staff were being prevented ‌from ⁠leaving or entering the premises.

NTV Uganda and other NMG TV and radio broadcasters in the country were all down as of Sunday morning.

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Ugandan government spokesperson Alan Kasujja did not immediately respond to ​a Reuters request ​for comment.

Managing Director of NMG in Uganda, Susan Nsibirwa, said she did not have an immediate comment.

Kainerugaba, who has ​been touted as a possible successor to his ageing ​father, ⁠President Yoweri Museveni, is well known for his controversial social media posts including threats to behead the leading opposition leader Bobi Wine.

In 2013, ⁠the ​government of Museveni, who has ruled the ​country since 1986, shut down the Daily Monitor for 10 days over reports regarding his ​succession.


By Felix Duru Mbah

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