News
Government Announces Nationwide Public Holiday Break

The Ugandan government has officially designated Tuesday, May 12, 2026, as a mandatory public holiday to facilitate the swearing-in ceremony of President Yoweri Kaguta Museveni.
The declaration formalizes the commencement of Museveni’s seventh consecutive term in office, following a deeply polarizing general election held on January 15.
The inauguration, scheduled to take place at the Kololo Independence Grounds in Kampala, is being orchestrated amid unprecedented security deployments and widespread allegations of systemic electoral fraud raised by opposition figures.
The public holiday mandate forces the temporary closure of the national economy, underscoring the enduring power of the ruling National Resistance Movement (NRM) over the state apparatus.
The Shadow of the January Elections
The lead-up to the January 15 elections was characterized by severe state-sponsored repression targeting the primary opposition candidate, Robert Kyagulanyi, widely known as Bobi Wine.
Independent monitors documented extensive internet blackouts, the arbitrary detention of opposition campaign staff, and the deployment of military units to polling stations across urban strongholds.
While the Electoral Commission ultimately declared Museveni the victor with nearly 59 percent of the vote, the opposition rejected the results entirely, citing mathematically impossible voter turnout figures in rural NRM strongholds.
The upcoming inauguration is viewed by political analysts not as a celebration of democratic consensus, but as a rigid display of executive continuity designed to silence lingering domestic dissent and project an image of absolute control to the international community.












