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Life And Times Of Busoga’s Ex – Premier Mutengu

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Jamal Junior
Jamal Junior
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Former Busoga Kingdom Prime minister and educator, Keith Mutengu breathed his last on Sunday March 17th, 2024.

The news of his demise was shared by Mr. Julius Mucunguzi , the in – coming head of public relations at the Electoral Commission via his X platform ( formerly Twitter) as he disclosed that he had recieved the sad news of the death of his 1990s headmaster at Jinja Secondary school.

The 88- year old prime in the past few years been in and out of local hospitals battling hypertension and stroke.

According to the Kingdom’s Minister for Culture ,Mr Richard Mafumo revealed that Mutengu died at Jinja Regional Referral Hospital and postmortem report is yet be valid.

Late Keith Mutengu was the first Busoga prime Minister after NRM restored Cultural institution and was prime during late Henry Muloki’s reign as Kyabazinga.

The late Mutengu was an educator who headed several schools in eastern Uganda at both primary and secondary levels.

He was a headteacher at Mwiri Primary School and later of Busoga College, Mwiri, as well as Manjasi High School in Tororo, where veteran journalist Alfred Geresom Musamali says he was nicknamed “Young Man” – for referring to every male student in his school as such.

At Jinja SS from the late 1980s to early 1993 when he was appointed prime minister of the kingdom, he headed the most populous school in East and Central Africa.

The population of Jinja SSS was at a mind-boggling 2,000-strong.

The late Mutengu was a revered elder in Busoga kingdom and the entire sub-region. He strived to forge unity throughout his liefe.

He had been the chairperson Busoga Kingdom clan heads. The kingdom is made up of 11 hereditary chiefdoms – Bugabula, Bulamogi, Kigulu, Luuka, Bukono, Busiki, Bugweri, Bukooli, Bunya, Bunyole and Butembe.

When Kyabazinga William Nadiope instituted a Roll of Honours for Basoga men and women who have distinguished themselves in public life as transformational leaders, servants and inspired to the people, among the those feted was Mutengu.

He was recognised with the “Omwooyo Gwa Busoga” medal for his exemplary contribution in diligently in protecting, nurturing and upholding Busoga’s culture, heritage and selflessness.

The awards on June 22, 2019, at Bugembe also went to former Speaker of Parliament Rebecca Kadaga and former Miss World Africa Quiin Abenakyo.

Muloki chose Mutengu to help tackle Busoga’s problems.

And those problems were many as the Kyabazinga outlined in his maiden speech that promised a speedy revival of the kingdom’s fortunes based on six key areas that Mutengu had named after the six vowels – “a, e, i, o, and u”.

They were agriculture, education, industry, organisation and unity.

Muloki’s could not have made a better choice than in the seasoned educator, who would show where the vision of Busoga lay when he presented an 11-page memorandum to President Museveni on July 25, 1993.

Busoga, Mutengu’s office said, needed to exploit a faithful capacity and voluntary will to unite its people under a recognisable, acceptable and progressive social-cultural leadership.

“Short of this we are first turning into a mediocre, or even substandard, ethnic community that could easily and inevitably be relegated to the lowest rungs of national leadership,” the addendum said, according to Daily Monitor.

“Poverty has become the staple way of life in most rural parts of Busoga. In real terms, neither do the Basoga living in town enjoy comparable success and affluence like the members of other communities.

Mutengu left the post of katukiro in 1999 following a bout of ill-health. He was succeeded by William Kiwagama.

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