A Discernment and Apostasy watch site for African Saints.
Prove all things..(1 Thesa.5:21)
Test Spirits..(I John 4:1)
Like the Bereans, check whether things are so(Acts 17:11)
KAMPALA- Mr Gilbert Arinaitwe
Bwana, a police officer who came to limelight in 2011 when he smashed Dr
Kizza Besigye’s car and sprayed pepper in his eyes at Mulago Roundabout
to stop him from demonstrating, has been arrested over alleged rape.
Police
spokesperson, Mr Asan Kasingye, confirmed the arrest of Assistant
Superintendent of Police Arinaitwe on Friday after he allegedly raped a
teenage girl in his vehicle at Nakawa, a Kampala suburb.
Mr
Kasingye said Mr Arinaitwe was redeployed to the Criminal Intelligence
Department (CID) in April last year after spending five years on
suspension.
He reportedly exchanged
telephone contacts with the girl at CID headquarters in Kampala where
the girl had been taken by her mother to be counselled on her unbecoming
sexual desires that had affected her academic performance.
Gilbert Arinaitwe: medical examinations confirm rape
Museveni blames believers for evils in Uganda: Yes,
the country has many Christian hypocrites but also backslidden Christians (like
President Museveni himself )who are mere spiritual politicians.
President Museveni today joined the catholic faithful to commemorate the Assumption of the Virgin Mary to Heaven.
President Yoweri Museveni thanked Ugandans for fighting for democracy
and also for choosing a government that can ensure peace and security.
The President, who was speaking to Catholic pilgrims during the Mass
at Our Lady, Queen of Peace Kiwamirembe Catholic Shrine in Lweza Parish,
Wakiso district, said he had come to join them to give thanks to the
Virgin Mary for the peace and security in the country.
“I am here to pray with you to the Virgin Mary and thank her for the
peace and all the good things she has done but also to share some of the
challenges still remaining,” he said.
The Catholic Church throughout the world holds annual prayers every
15th of August to mark the assumption of the Virgin Mary to heaven.
President Museveni used the occasion to apologize for the insecurity
that rocked the Kiwamirembe hill during the 1970s when Tanzanian
soldiers came to liberate Uganda from the Idi Amin regime.
“I am sorry for the insecurity that rocked the hill. I was with the
Tanzanians who put the guns on this hill but I am glad that the wars
brought peace and development to the area,” he said.
Kampala Archdiocesan Prelate, the Most Rev. Dr. Cyprian Kizito Lwanga
explained to the congregation that the place was named Kiwamirembe
after the then Lweza Parish Priest and his parishioners started to pray
for peace to be restored.
“In the 1970s, we had a civil war here and those that were fighting
put up big guns here. The prayers were heard and no bombs went off at
the hill,” he said.
Archbishop Kizito Lwanga thanked President Museveni and the NRM
Government for the peace and security in the country. He read out a
message from Pope Francis reminding the pilgrims not only to pray for
themselves but also to pray for their loved ones, instructors, leaders
and the vulnerable.
“The faithful should pray to Maria, thanking her for the peace and
good things we have achieved but also present our problems both personal
and as a country”, Mr Museveni said.
The president continued saying
“On seeing the good roads and the industries below this hill, I thank
Jesus Christ, Maria, the Holy Spirit and God for a visionary government
that has aided this development.
Christians and indeed everyone should work hard, just as St. Paul commands that “Those who do not work will not eat”.
Africans concentrate on multiplying and not dominance over other
creatures yet in Genesis, during creation, God commanded us not only to
multiply but also dominate over other creation.
This hill on which this shrine stands was destroyed during the
struggle against bad leadership of Amin. I pledge Shs80 million as
contribution to redevelopment of this area”.
President Museveni donated Shs.20 million towards the management of
the shrine and another Shs.80 million for the development of the shrine.
State Minister for Primary Education, Hon. Rosemary Sseninde and
former East African Legislative Assembly (EALA) Speaker, Rt. Hon.
Margaret Nnantongo Zziwa, attended the Mass.
Museveni Apologizes to Kiwamirembe Catholics for 1970 Insurgency
President Yoweri Museveni has lauded Ugandans for fighting for democracy and also for choosing a government that can ensure peace and security.
Museveni, who was speaking to Catholic pilgrims during the Mass at Our Lady, Queen of Peace Kiwamirembe Catholic
Shrine in Lweza Parish, Wakiso district, said he had come to join them
to give thanks to the Virgin Mary for the peace and security in the
country.
“I am here to pray with you to the
Virgin Mary and thank her for the peace and all the good things she has
done but also to share some of the challenges still remaining,” he said.
The Catholic Church throughout the world holds annual prayers every 15th of August to mark the assumption of the Virgin Mary to heaven.
Museveni used the occasion to apologize
for the insecurity that rocked the Kiwamirembe hill during the 1970s
when Tanzanian soldiers came to liberate Uganda from the Idi Amin regime.
“I am sorry for the insecurity that
rocked the hill. I was with the Tanzanians who put the guns on this hill
but I am glad that the wars brought peace and development to the area,” he said.
Kampala Archdiocesan Prelate, the Most Rev. Dr. Cyprian Kizito Lwanga explained to the congregation
that the place was named Kiwamirembe after the then Lweza Parish Priest
and his parishioners started to pray for peace to be restored.
“In the 1970s, we had a civil war here and those that were fighting put up big guns here. The prayers were heard and no bombs went off at the hill,” he said.
Archbishop Kizito Lwanga thanked Museveni and the NRM Government for the peace and security in the country.
He read out a message from Pope Francis
reminding the pilgrims not only to pray for themselves but also to pray
for their loved ones, instructors, leaders and the vulnerable.
President Museveni donated Shs20 million
towards the management of the shrine and another Shs80 million for the
development of the shrine.
State Minister for Primary Education,
Hon. Rosemary Sseninde and former East African Legislative Assembly
(EALA) Speaker, Rt. Hon. Margaret Nnantongo Zziwa, attended the Mass.