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Published UgandaUpdated

Uganda's parliament introduces bill to let military courts try civilians

  • Uganda's Parliament introduced the Uganda People's Defence Forces Amendment Bill, 2025, on May 13 to allow military courts to try civilians under exceptional circumstances.
  • The bill was prompted by a January 31, 2025 Supreme Court ruling that declared civilian trials in military courts unconstitutional, which the government opposes and seeks to revise.
  • The bill expands court martial jurisdiction to include civilians accused of unlawful possession of military arms or aiding soldiers to commit serious crimes, with judges appointed by the military high command.
  • David Lewis Rubongoya of the National Unity Platform stated the bill will be used to persecute regime opponents, while critics warn it risks undermining judicial independence and fair trial rights.
  • If enacted, the bill may reverse prior judicial protections, intensify political repression, and provoke legal and public scrutiny over the future of military justice in Uganda.
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Uganda's Presidential Son and Commander-in-Chief boast with violence against the opposition. A new law is also to bring civilians to military courts.

In Tanzania and Uganda, governments are getting harder and harder against the opposition. Two prominent politicians are accused of high treason.

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kampalavoice.com broke the news in on Tuesday, May 13, 2025.
Sources are mostly out of South Africa (2)

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