ISO agent arrested at Monitor, Gen Tinye’s case goes to court
23:22
A man who identified himself as a State agent and believed to
have been deployed to trail this newspaper’s journalist was on Wednesday
night arrested outside Monitor Publications Ltd head offices in
Namuwongo.
He was arrested by guards from KK Security, a private security group guarding the premises, at about 7:45pm local time.
He was found with an identity card in the names of Denis Orach. The card also showed he was recently recruited into the Internal Security Organisation.
He was found with an identity card in the names of Denis Orach. The card also showed he was recently recruited into the Internal Security Organisation.
The newspaper’s reporter, Mr Richard Wanambwa,
thrust into public eye after a story he co-authored with colleague
Risdel Kasasira about alleged schemes to kill three top government
officials, said he became suspicious when he found strangers had
surrounded his car.
By press time, attempts to contact Mr Ronnie Balya, the head of ISO, were futile as he was not picking calls.
By press time, attempts to contact Mr Ronnie Balya, the head of ISO, were futile as he was not picking calls.
However, intelligence and military officers,
including Capt Edson Kwesiga, the spokesperson of the elite Special
Forces Command, said the suspect was likely to be an impostor.
Police release suspect
The individual was handed over to police, but the officer in-charge of the Kisugu Police Station where he was taken on Wednesday night, strangely suggested that the matter be reported to Local Council officials before releasing the agent.
The individual was handed over to police, but the officer in-charge of the Kisugu Police Station where he was taken on Wednesday night, strangely suggested that the matter be reported to Local Council officials before releasing the agent.
Meanwhile, the Monitor through its lawyer, Mr
James Nagwala, is to seek a judicial review of an order secured by the
Police to force four company journalists to avail the original Gen.
David Sejusa letter, which is at the centre of the current controversy.
The order issued by Nakawa Court Chief Magistrate Rosemary Bareebe was served on the newspaper shortly after midday yesterday.
Mr Nangwala has said the order will be challenged
on grounds that the journalists, including Executive Editor Simon
Freeman, Managing Editor Don Wanyama and reporters Kasasira and Wanambwa
,were neither the authors nor the recipients of the letter.
“The order is misdirected. It should have been
directed to the author or the recipient. The only original that the
Monitor officials can avail is the copy of the newspaper which they (the
police) already have,” Mr Nangwala said.
Mr Wanyama and the reporters, who had earlier been
charged with refusal to cooperate and avail information contrary to the
Police Act, appeared for the third consecutive day at CIID headquarters
in Kibuli yesterday.
The head of the Media Crimes desk, Mr Simon Kuteesa, discharged them unconditionally, saying they would be invited when need arises.
The head of the Media Crimes desk, Mr Simon Kuteesa, discharged them unconditionally, saying they would be invited when need arises.
Trailed journalist narrates ordeal
My vehicle was parked at a washing bay, about 80
metres from office, where it was cleaned earlier in the day. I found a
group of five – one woman and two men seated in a car with tinted
windows and two leaning on a motorcycle – positioned close to my
vehicle.
When they saw me arrive, three of the men began
talking on phone while consulting one another, raising my suspicion. It
was then that I alerted the private guards securing Monitor offices, who
intercepted one of them as he rolled on a motorcycle.
He could not explain what he was doing, prompting
his arrest. Upon checking, he was found with an ISO identification card
indicating his name was Denis Orach.
Mr Orach said he had come to pick a friend,
Elisha, a student at Kampala International University (KIU). KIU campus
is at Kansanga, about six kilometres from Monitor offices. Mr Orach was
not violent, carried no gun but refused to cooperate when interrogated
within Monitor premises.

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