KAMPALA-UGANDA/NEWSDAY. The High court in Kampala has dismissed an application filed by the state minister for Urban Planning Persis Namuganza seeking to quash a report by the parliamentary ad-hoc committee on the Naguru Nakawa land misallocation that recommended her removal from office.
Records before the court show that the disputed ad-hoc committee report was presented before parliament which approved its recommendations in accordance with the law on May 18, 2022.
The committee found Namuganza guilty of overstepping her powers in directing the giveaway of the Naguru land by Uganda Land Commission (ULC) to different individuals and companies which was done without following the PPDA Act. The report further faulted Namuganza for acting on a non-existent presidential directive.
However being dissatisfied with the report and its recommendations, the minister dragged the attorney general to court seeking to have it quashed on the ground that she was condemned unheard. She also asked court to compel the attorney general to pay Shs 1 billion to her as damages.
At the trial, the minister through her lawyers; Pande Norman, Norman Mwanja, and Wilber Kayiwa told court that she was condemned unheard and declared to have abused her office on a report which was biased, inconsistent, and also lacked proper assessment.
According to the lawyers, when their client Namuganza appeared before the committee, she presented a letter that she had written to the chairperson ULC requesting for consideration of some companies but it was not a directive. But to her surprise, the said letter was not attached to the report.
Court heard that the ad-hoc committee report which was tabled before parliament for consideration did not contain the purported letter and minutes that Namuganza based on to direct ULC to allocate land to different individuals and companies which would have guided them in their debate as to whether to adopt or disregard it.
In response, the attorney general through commissioner George Kallemera asked the court to dismiss Namuganza’s case saying she cannot challenge a recommendation of parliament pending debate and consideration by the executive to assess whether or not to implement it.
In his decision on Tuesday, justice Musa Ssekaana said Namuganza’s application fails because she did not set out any evidence to prove that she was not given a fair hearing by the ad-hoc committee apart from merely alleging.
“The applicant did not set out any evidence to prove that she was not given a fair hearing apart from merely alleging every limb of what amounts to a fair hearing and contending in submissions that they were not observed…this ground has not been proved by the applicant, the applicant has failed to prove this ground,” said Ssekaana.
He accordingly dismissed her application and ordered each party to bear its own costs.
Do you want to share a story, comment or opinion regarding this story or others, Email us at newsdayuganda@gmail.com Tel/WhatsApp........0726054858
Discussion about this post