Ugandan Olympian Who Disappeared To Meet Museveni For Discussions....

A Ugandan weightlifter has been found four days after he disappeared from an Olympic training camp in Japan leaving a note saying he wanted to find work, police said Tuesday.

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Mr Julius Ssekitoleko.

The disappearance of Julius Ssekitoleko came at a time of high public concern over coronavirus risks as thousands of foreigners arrive for the Games.
“Today, the man was found in Mie Prefecture with no injuries and no involvement in any crime,” an Osaka police official, who declined to be named, told AFP.
“He carried his own ID and identified himself. It is not certain to whom we should send the man – the team or the embassy.”
The alarm was raised on Friday after Ssekitoleko failed to show up for a coronavirus test and was not in his hotel room.
The 20-year-old had recently found out he would not be able to compete at the Tokyo Games, which open on Friday, because of a quota system.
A note was found in his room requesting his belongings be sent to his family in Uganda, according to officials in Izumisano city in Osaka prefecture, where the team was training. :smiley:
Police said Ssekitoleko had traveled to Nagoya in central Japan and then to nearby Gifu prefecture, before moving south to Mie.
“He was found in a house belonging to people who have a connection to the man. He did not offer resistance. He was talking frankly.
We are still questioning him about his motive,” the police official said.
When Uganda’s delegation arrived in Japan last month, a coach tested positive on arrival, with another member of the delegation also testing positive later.
Virus cases are rising in Tokyo, which is under a state of emergency, and there is heavy scrutiny in Japan of infection risks linked to the Games.

Athletes and other Olympic participants are subject to strict rules including regular testing and limits on their movement.

Huyo atalimwa viboko na army commanders.

Sasa wapi kumeandikwa alienda kea m7?

Unasahau the digi effect of sensationalizing everything ?

Idiot

He had the right idea. His chances of winning a medal are zero. He was better off trying to better his life. What he did not realize is that Japan is different. They dont take asylum seekers.

Museveni’s Crafty…

Until recently, John Guma-Komwiswa was living in two worlds. By day he had a good job. In the morning he would commute a short distance from his home in Bermondsey to Becket House, a central London office that works with asylum and immigration cases.

There, as a senior caseworker, he dealt with the sea of bureaucracy attached to asylum cases from across the world - including, it seems, his native Uganda.

What his employers may not have known was that during his spare time, Mr Guma-Komwiswa had a very different identity - a political post, in fact.

As secretary-general for the UK and Ireland chapter of the National Resistance Movement (NRM), headed by Ugandan president Yoweri Museveni, he was the figurehead in Britain for a grouping that helped the guerrilla general seize power in 1986 and rule the country. Now his professional and private life have been put on hold while a specialist team of Home Office investigators collaborates with police to probe allegations of corruption.

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John Guma-Komwiswa

One complaint, seen by the Guardian, states that three Ugandan asylum seekers’ cases were “frustrated and rejected” because of “direct malice or bad influence on the decision of their individual cases” by Mr Guma-Komwiswa.

Investigators are likely to want to establish how a Ugandan political figure secured a role within the Immigration and Nationality Directorate and, crucially, whether any asylum claims were improperly influenced.

Mr Guma-Komwiswa has been suspended from his job at the Home Office and has resigned from his political post at the NRM. But he said he was not concerned about the inquiry. “I’m not bothered at all. If there is no truth in what they’re saying, why should I be bothered? Obviously, you judge [asylum] on merit - that is Home Office procedure.”

Mr Guma-Komwiswa’s two worlds collided at a meeting in Bermondsey this year, scheduled in the run-up to the first democratic elections in Uganda in 26 years in February. The Guardian has obtained a video of the meeting, held on February 11 for various political groupings within the Ugandan community to debate the forthcoming polls.

The footage shows Mr Guma-Komwiswa sitting on a panel of seven political representatives from different parties, introduced by the chairman as “Mr Guma-Komwiswa of NRM”.

Alex Oringa, an immigration lawyer with ties to Ugandan opposition groups, said he took his seat at the meeting, looked up, and saw someone he recognised from his asylum work. He raised a point of information. “I asked him to confirm whether he was the very Mr Guma who works in the Home Office,” he recalled. “I said, 'How do you exercise impartiality deciding on their matters when you are identified so clearly with the regime?”

In the months that followed, Mr Oringa filed two separate complaints to the immigration service’s complaints unit. He said that one Ugandan client’s immigration matters should not have been administered by a leading representative of the ruling party from the regime she was claiming to flee. Another client, he alleged, had been dissuaded from applying for asylum by Mr Guma-Komwiswa. It would take several months for an investigation to begin.

One complainant, Sarah Male, a 47-year-old member of the high-profile royal family of the Ugandan kingdom of Buganda, told the Guardian: “I met him in a Weatherspoons pub in Forest Gate. He told me, ‘You know Sarah, what you need to do is go back to Museveni, you can’t claim asylum here.’ He was quarrelling with me, telling me that Museveni has to teach me. He told me there is no way I would get asylum here.”

Another, Susan Mporampora, 21, said she was surprised to discover that a man she had met in a social context in Forest Gate, and had asked her questions about her asylum claim, turned out to be the Home Office official corresponding with her lawyers over immigration matters.

Mr Guma-Komwiswa firmly denies any suggestions that he discouraged people from applying for asylum, or that he used his position to frustrate or reject applications. “Everything is total rubbish - it’s all lies,” he said. “From the people I have spoken to [I believe], they have done this for political purposes. What do they hope to achieve by attacking an innocent individual?”

The implications of the probe have spread to Uganda, where opposition leader Kizza Besigye, from the Forum for Democratic Change, has alleged that “Museveni’s spies” have infiltrated the Home Office. “The UK taxpayer’s money pays Museveni’s spies, they are sponsored on official missions,” he told a pan-African website based in New York, The Black Star News.

Since 1998, more than 2,800 asylum applications from Ugandans were initially declined - 195 were granted refugee status or other leave to remain by the Home Office.

In the last three quarters of this year, 95 Ugandans were initially refused asylum - none were granted refugee status.

huyu ni Mteso wakina @Abba, wale wa Uganda

Ugandan police said Wednesday they were interrogating a weightlifter who disappeared in Japan after failing to qualify for the Tokyo Olympics, as his family appealed for his release from custody.
Julius Ssekitoleko, 20, vanished from an Olympic training camp after learning he did not meet standards to compete in the Games, making headlines around the world as Japanese officials scrambled to locate him.

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Julius Ssekitoleko

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He was found and flown home to Uganda where government officials said he would undergo counselling.
But he was taken into police custody, said family members who have petitioned the courts for his release.
“It is heartbreaking to see my son sharing a cell with criminals when he is innocent,” the athlete’s mother, Juliet Nalwadda, told AFP Wednesday.
“His rights are being violated by police detaining him indefinitely. I appeal to the government, and sportsmen and women, to secure his release. This is an innocent young man. He didn’t want to hurt anyone. Why is he being treated like a criminal?”
A spokesman for Uganda’s criminal investigations department said Ssekitoleko was being held for interrogation over suspected “fraud”.
“We have been informed Ssekitoleko in the first place did not qualify to be on the team. So how did he get there, who could have been behind his movement, this is what the police are trying to establish,” the spokesman, Charles Twine, told AFP.
“If there is evidence of fraud or an illegal act, Ssekitoleko will be taken to court and charged in line with the offence committed. If there is no evidence, he will be set free.”

Uganda’s weightlifting federation said Ssekitoleko came from a poor family and had been training very hard for his first Olympics.
After he went missing, a note was found in Ssekitoleko’s hotel room in which he said he wanted to work in Japan and asked that his belongings be sent to his family in Uganda.
The Union of Uganda Sports Federations and Associations condemned Ssekitoleko’s ongoing detention and called for his immediate release so he could be reunited with his family.
“He deserves sympathy, not harsh treatment” the head of the union, Moses Muhangi, told AFP.
Ssekitoleko’s plight has stirred mixed reactions in Uganda. The government was forced to apologise to Japan over the incident that Uganda’s state minister for foreign affairs labelled “unacceptable conduct and treachery”.
But others have been more sympathetic toward the young athlete whose dreams were dashed.
“Ssekitoleko is not a criminal, he is a victim of an economy that works for the few (in the) privileged class,” Ugandan legislator Betty Nambooze said Wednesday.

Update:

Ugandan weightlifter who disappeared in Japan after failing to qualify for the Tokyo Olympics was charged Wednesday with conspiracy to defraud, his lawyer said.

On Wednesday he was charged with “conspiracy to defraud” before being released on a police bond, his lawyer Anthony Wameli told AFP.

“He is happy that he has been freed after spending five days in detention which is an infringement on his rights,” he added.
A spokesman for Uganda’s criminal investigations department said Ssekitoleko may have conspired with a government official to be included on the team for Japan “well aware that he did not meet the qualifications”.
“Investigations will confirm the depth of the conspiracy to defraud the government as he had been paid allowances at the time of his disappearance,” the spokesman, Charles Twine, told AFP.