Skip to main content

Bank Of Uganda Officials Grilled Over Hiring Foreign Lawyers

The Bank of Uganda officials led by the deputy governor bank of Uganda Louis Kasekende have faced it rough before the parliamentary committee on commissions, statutory Authorities and state enterprises over hiring external lawyers to battle court cases which are against central bank.
The committee chaired by the mp for Bugweri county Abdul katuntu had summoned the bank of Uganda governor to explain why they seek services of private lawyers to represent BOU in court yet the bank has a legal department with legal officers who could have battled the cases in court
Among the notable cases is the ongoing crane bank case against bank of Uganda which is being pursued by the private lawyers on behalf of bank of Uganda.
The committee members who include the woman mp koboko district Margaret Babadiri,kitgum municipality mp Beatrice Anywar, Bukedea district woman mp Anita Among and Abdul katuntu pinned Bank of Uganda officials for not utilizing the services of the office of the Attorney general as the government principal legal advisor to battle some of the cases brought against bank of Uganda instead of wasting tax payers money on hiring external layers.
The  mp for Bugweri county Abdul katuntu  said that government should guide its institutions  on what point they should seek external lawyers’ service to cut costs spent on private layers yet there is Attorney general paid to deal with court cases.

However the deputy governor Louis kasekende and bank of Uganda legal officer Margaret Kasule said that the central bank legal department is under staffed hence resorting to hiring the private lawyers.

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Washington approves virus drug as US states ease lockdowns

American authorities have approved an experimental drug for emergency use on coronavirus patients, as more US states eased pandemic lockdowns despite another spike in deaths from the disease. The approval is the latest step in a global push to find viable treatments and a vaccine for the coronavirus, which has left half of humanity under some form of lockdown, hammered the world economy and infected more than 3.3 million people. Remdesivir, an antiviral drug initially developed to treat Ebola, was given the green light on Friday after a major trial found that it boosted recovery in serious COVID-19 patients. "It's really a very promising situation," President Donald Trump said on Friday at the White House, where he was joined by Daniel O'Day, CEO of Gilead Sciences, which developed Remdesivir. The drug incorporates itself into the virus's genome, short-circuiting its replication process. Its approval came as the US leaders struggled with growing...

Tears for Amama

Tears for Amama I know why my tears run down  my face now; I know what tears they are that speed down my jaws. For one of the names of great weight now needs a grave And a shelf in the museum of our political archives. For let’s face it: When a large tree finally fatally falls, Its thundering thud thickly thumps the earth; We all feel its vibration. Our bodies vibrate. Our breasts wiggle. And we all know – we all should know, No wind blew it down. No blast caught it off guard. It must be some machete that crushed its limbs, It must be some lumber saw that cut away its trunk. So there lies Our John Patrick Amama Mbabazi Mister honourable, For up-side-down and down-side-up Has his ex-right honourable name axed overnight. How horrible it now sounds In the ears of its ex-ardent admirers! How abominable it now is abused From the mouths of its ex-praise singers! But clever man of Kinkyizi, Formerly mistaken for clever  brain of ...

KENYA ELECTIONS: The Outcome, the DNA of Uganda's Sustainability

As Kenya,  East Africa's arguably best economy heads for presidential polls on tuesday,  I find it imperative that I try to squeeze juice out of this sacred election. I know most of you, just like me, have so many rhetorical expectations from this mighty election, but most sacredly are the questions that preoccupy our minds as to how the political show down will go in our neighbourhood. Most importantly, everyone is asking himself the question: 'What does the Harambe election mean to us as a country?. As I allow you to ponder on the connotative underpinnings of this election unto us, allow me first delve us onto the historical perspective and its alliterative explanatory shaping of Kenya's politics.  In 1895, Kenya became a Protectorate under the colonial york of the British. Just like it was in Uganda and many African countries in Africa, if not all, so  was it in Kenya, that the master,  accruing from the cartoon number of administrators on the continent and ...