Crime

Breaking :Former MUBS Principal Prof. Waswa Balunywa Remanded Luzira Prison Over Alleged Abuse Office

Ssemaganda Moses Hope
By Ssemaganda Moses Hope


Breaking :Former MUBS Principal Prof. Waswa Balunywa Remanded Luzira Prison Over Alleged Abuse Office
Breaking :Former MUBS Principal Prof. Waswa Balunywa Remanded Luzira Prison Over Alleged Abuse Office

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Kampala, September 2, 2025 – In a dramatic turn of events, Professor Waswa Balunywa, the former Principal of Makerere University Business School (MUBS), has been remanded to Luzira Prison following his court appearance at the Anti-Corruption Court. This marks a critical moment in Uganda’s crackdown on institutional corruption and ghost payroll schemes.


 


 

Charges and Legal Proceedings


 


 

  • Prof. Balunywa faces two counts of abuse of office, under Section 10(1) of the Anti-Corruption Court Act—each offense carrying a maximum sentence of seven years’ imprisonment. 
  • The prosecution alleges that between February and April 2023, Balunywa illegally appointed three administrative assistants—James Arike, Nathan Nuwagira, and Nimrod Kakayi—despite their lack of requisite academic qualifications, resulting in ineligible costs to government. 
  • Further, he faces fresh accusations of illegally appointing:
    • 103 academic staff
    • 17 administrative staff
    • 69 support staff
      that should lawfully have been recruited by a designated appointing committee. 

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Co-Accused and Broader Context


 


 

  • Jacqueline Namaganda, former Acting Human Resource Director at MUBS and now Chief Quality Assurance Officer, stands as a co-accused on charges of neglect of duty. She has been granted cash bail of Shs 4 million, with sureties bound at Shs 50 million, and ordered to surrender her passport. 
  • These case proceedings are part of a wider “ghost workers” scandal, implicating over 30 officials from various institutions—including the Civil Aviation Authority, Uganda Police Force, and Entebbe Hospital—in schemes that reportedly cost the government over Shs 53 billion annually. 
  • The scandal is a central feature of President Museveni’s intensified anti-corruption campaign. The Inspectorate of Government and CID investigations have so far led to arrests of senior officials. 


 


 


 

Court Developments & Next Steps


 


 

  • Prior to this appearance, Balunywa had failed to show up in court, citing health reasons and uncertainty over whether summonses had been properly served. The court ultimately granted an extension and instructed the prosecution to serve his lawyers directly. 
  • The remand order is set to last until September 5, 2025, pending further hearings. 


 


 


 


 


 

Why It Matters


 


 

  • Prof. Balunywa is a renowned academic and administrator who served as MUBS Principal from 1997 to 2023—a period during which he significantly shaped university management and established the private student scheme. 
  • The case not only tests legal accountability but also reflects growing public expectations for transparency in higher education and public institutions.
  • As proceedings unfold, they will likely set precedents for handling senior officials in Uganda’s fight against corruption—and potentially influence reforms in recruitment and governance processes nationwide.


 


 

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