Warning: Trying to access array offset on value of type bool in /usr/www/users/urnnet/a/story.php on line 43 We Have Punished Brig. Okoya’s Killers - Museveni :: Uganda Radionetwork
The President said the politics of identity, religion, and tribes led to the killings of many innocent people in the country in the past which were uncalled for at the time if the leaders focused on uniting the country.
Museveni lays a wreath on the casket containing remains of Brig. Pierino Okoya during state reburial in Bongo-tyet village in Palaro Subcounty, Gulu District on Friday September 29 2023.
President Yoweri Kaguta Museveni has
told the people of the Acholi Sub-region that those suspected to have orchestrated
the killing of Brig. Gen Pierino Okoya and other innocent Ugandans got
punished and “never lived” to succeed in life.
The President made the remarks on
Friday while presiding over the state reburial of Brig. Okoya and his wife Anna
Akello Okoya at his ancestral home in Bongo-tyet village in Palaro Sub-County,
Gulu District.
Gen. Okoya was gruesomely
murdered on January 25th, 1970, along with his wife Anna at his home in Koro
village, then Gulu District, now in Omoro district.
The assassination of Brig.
Okoya who was Uganda’s Army Second Infantry brigade commander in Masaka during the Milton Obote regime was allegedly masterminded by former President
Idi Amin, who was then the Army commander.
Speaking to hundreds of mourners
who attended the reburial cermony, President Museveni said those who killed Gen.
Okoya including Amin got punished and lost it in life. He said Brig. Okoya was a
soldier who had potential in life citing that he grew in ranks at a tender age.
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According to President Musveni,
while Okoya’s killers took his life over ill motives, they didn’t stand to be
celebrated today arguing that only those who do good are remembered for their
characters.
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He however noted that Uganda’s
problem and other African countries started on a bad foundation at Independence
because the political leaders then never had enough time to prepare themselves
and only emphasized the politics of identity, tribes, and religion instead of
unity.
The President said the politics of identity, religion, and tribes led to the killings
of many innocent people in the country in the past which were uncalled for at
the time if the leaders focused on uniting the country.
President Museveni promised that the
government would build a technical school in Palaro Sub- County in memory of
Brig. Gen Okoya. This was after the area LCI Chairperson of Bongo-tyet village and
the Woman Member of Parliament for Gulu District Sharon Laker Balmoi made a
request for a technical school to be built to carry on the legacy of Bri. Okoya
in his home village and the Acholi Subregion.
Gulu Archdiocese Archbishop John
Baptist Odama who was the main celebrant during a sermon commended the President
for his initiative in facilitating the reconciliation between the Lamogi and
Palaro clans who hadn’t been at peace since the death of Okoya. He says the
reburial ceremony should send a message of unity and harmony among different
people in the country.
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The State Minister for Foreign
Affairs Henry Okello Oryem notes that misfortunes had bedeviled the region
owing to the delayed decent reburial of Gen Okoya and his wife Akello who had
been gruesomely murdered.
Okello says with the government
stepping in to give a decent reburial, there will be prolonged peace and
healing among the people of the Acholi Sub-region and a lasting reconciliation with
other neighbors.
Chief Justice Alfonse Owiny-dollo
noted the initiative towards holding the reburial and having blood compensation
for the death of Brig. Okoya has helped to heal the wounds between the people
of Palaro clan and those of Lamogi in Amuru.
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Pageya Clan Chief Yusuf Adek
Okwonga, who has been key in brokering reconciliation between the Palaro clan and
the Pujwani clan whose son, Lt. Raymond Oryem was suspected to have shot dead Okoya
commended the government for facilitating the reconciliation.
He says the reburial
of Okoya and his wife marks a new dawn for peace, and healing in the Acholi and
an end to further gruesome murder of sons of the region.
The President also commissioned
a 200 million shillings furnished house built for the family members of Brig.
Okoya by the UPDF engineering brigade at his ancestral home in Bongo-tyet
village.
Brig. Okoya’s casket was lowered
with a 11 gun salutes fired by the Special Forces Command Artillery Brigade.