Gen Muhoozi shuts down NTV Uganda, Spark TV and Daily Monitor
Lt. General Muhoozi Kainerugaba, the son of Uganda's President Yoweri Museveni, who leads the Ugandan army's land forces, looks on during his birthday party in Entebbe, Uganda May 7, 2022. REUTERS/Abubaker Lubowa/File Photo
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NTV Uganda and Spark TV reportedly went off air in the wee hours of Sunday morning after an overnight security crackdown at the Nation Media Group (NMG) Uganda offices in Namuwongo, Kampala.
The shutdown came after General Muhoozi, President Yoweri Museveni's son, shared a series of alarming posts on X, vowing a crackdown on the aforementioned stations.
"Mzee has approved my plan to close both NTV and Monitor. We are moving immediately!," he wrote.
The crackdown is believed to be prompted by "bad stories" targeting the nation's top leadership, following a series of hard-hitting news reports and television features focusing on Uganda’s political and security establishment.
"From now on ALL bad stories about Uganda have to be cleared by my office!. In Uganda, I DO NOT believe in a free press! The press should be guided by cadres of the revolution," he added.
The CDF, known for his provocative online presence, has ordered that the stations will not re-open without his approval.
NMG Uganda owns 20-year-old NTV Uganda, Star TV, Daily Monitor, The East African, Dembe FM among others.
A similar dramatic raid was witnessed in Uganda in May 2013 when armed police officers raided Daily Monitor's offices after a publication of a letter claimed to be authored by Gen. David Sejusa, then Coordinator of Intelligence Services, alleging a plan to prepare Muhoozi as his father's successor.
It later became widely known as the “Muhoozi Project”.
As the government strongly rejected the allegations, police sealed the newspaper’s premises, suspended KFM and Dembe FM operations as officials argued that the operation formed part of criminal investigations into the leaked intelligence correspondence.
Media rights organisations condemned the raid as an attack on press freedom.

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