KAMPALA.

The newly appointed members of the General Court Martial and other divisional military courts are today expected to take their oath of office.
The ceremony starting at 9:am is expected to be presided over by Principal Judge, Lady Justice Jane Frances Abodo at the Supreme Court Conference Hall in Kampala.
According to sources in the Judiciary , after taking the oath, the members will be briefed on a new date for the resumption of Court Martial operations, which have been suspended for several months following the January 2025 landmark Supreme Court ruling. The timing of the swearing-in—barely a week to the general elections—is likely to attract criticism from government critics, given past accusations that the General Court Martial has always been used to prosecute political opponents. The government has consistently denied these allegations.
Sources further revealed that media houses were not invited to cover the ceremony. Efforts by this publication to obtain official confirmation were unsuccessful.
Judiciary spokesperson James Jumire Mawanda said he was on leave and referred inquiries to the Chief Registrar of the Judiciary, who was not immediately available for comment.
The swearing-in ceremony follows appointments made by President Museveni on November 25, 2025, under the UPDF Act, upon advice of the Judicial Service Commission. The President appointed Brig Gen Richard Tukacungurwa as Chairperson of the General Court Martial, replacing Brigadier Freeman Robert Mugabe.
The appointment was communicated to the Chief of Defence Forces, Gen Muhoozi Kainerugaba, who is also Mr Museveni’s son .
Brig Gen Tukacungurwa, an advocate of the High Court who has served for more than a decade as a Judge Advocate, will head an entirely new panel of senior officers. The members include Colonel Wankandya Simon Tusah, Colonel Asha Patra, Colonel Kangwamu Fredrick, Col Mugisha Raphael, Lt Col Igambi Mohammedie Nasser, Major Amodoi Samuel Moses, Maj Arihaihi Emmanuel, Maj Nyombi Abubaker, and Maj Chemtai Denis.
The President also appointed Lt Col Drani Epalu David as head of the Fourth Division Court Martial and Lieutenant Col Mulyanti Yaqoub Hassan to lead the One SFG Court. Sources say all panel members are expected to take the oath today, except prosecutors attached to the military courts, led by Col Raphael Mugisha, the Head of Prosecutions. The prosecutors will not be sworn in because they represent the state and are not considered neutral adjudicators. However, both defence counsel and army prosecutors are expected to attend the ceremony as members of the Court Martial.
This marks the first time Court Martial members are being sworn in under the Judiciary’s supervision. Previously, military court members were sworn in internally, often at Makindye, with the Court Martial chairperson presiding. The changes follow a January 31, 2025 Supreme Court judgment that rendered military courts inactive. In a decision led by Chief Justice Alfonse Owiny-Dollo—who is set to retire on January 18, 2026—the court ruled that civilians can no longer be tried in military courts, declaring the long-standing practice unconstitutional.
The Supreme Court found that military courts lack legal competence to try civilians, citing the absence of mandatory legal training for panel members, lack of security of tenure, inadequate facilities for defence preparation, and the absence of an independent appellate mechanism. The court ordered all Court Martial proceedings to cease and directed that pending cases involving civilians be transferred to the Director of Public Prosecutions for handling in civilian courts.
Following the ruling, Court Martial activities were suspended for months. In response, Attorney General Kiryowa Kiwanuka introduced amendments to the UPDF Act, which were passed by Parliament and later assented to by President Museveni. The amendments reinstated civilian trials in military courts under a narrow exception allowed by the Supreme Court, where a civilian is jointly charged with a soldier who is the principal offender.Let remains to be seen whether politicians like former Museveni’s personal physician Dr Kizza Besigye and hundreds of National Unity Platform party (NUP) members currently on remand after appearing in the court marital will again be presented before the same court and charged .