By Jamil Lutakome
Luzira prison officials are leaving in fear of a looming strike due to the overwhelming number of prisoners. The prison spokesperson Frank Baine told The Grapevine that if government does not come in and address the prosecutors’’ problems, they are going to find it impossible to control the overwhelming number of prisoners that are brought in daily.
On Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday last week, The Grapevine travelled to Luzira Prison to start our investigation to find out the extent of the effect of the prosecutors’ strike. We talked to some inmates who told us their story and how they are being affected.
On Tuesday, we first piloted the prison and looked at potential inmates we were going to talk to. We spent the entire Wednesday and Thursday at Murchison bay and upper prison. Here, we managed to talk to some prisoners.
We started with a one Mpanga (we left his second name because he spoke to us on condition of anonymity). Mpanga is remaining with three years on his 10 years sentence after a high court in Jinja convicted him for rape. Mpanga who is also a prisoner’s leader in Murchison bay told us that for the last three months, the situation in Luzira (Murchison bay) is not good at all.
He narrated that the prison is overcrowded, food nowadays is not enough and the sanitation situation is worrying. Mpanga told us, “the sewage is almost passing on the surface and we are leaving in fear for diseases like cholera and diarrhea. We need help my brother.”
When we asked him about the rumour that some prisoners want to strike, he told us, “yes many of us want to strike, we live like animals. Even though we are criminals, we have a right to live in a good environment. Many of our colleagues who still have pending cases are no longer going to court, they are telling us that prosecutors are on strike. How does it concern us. We shall strike that’s the truth my brother.”

When we went to upper prison on Thursday, we managed to visit Kampala city businessman Kato Kajubi who is on life sentence after being convicted for murder. Kajubi decried the poor conditions they pass through nowadays due to prosecutors’ strike.
“I have already appealed my sentence in the Supreme Court. My lawyers told me that it was supposed to start in October this year but last week one of them came here and told me that they are expecting it to start next year because of the prosecutor’s strikes,” Kajubi noted. He added that he instructed his lawyers to apply for him bail in the supreme court as his appeal is pending. “They told me that they can’t process it because no one can represent the DPP, all are on strike, so my son it seems am still here,” the soft spoken Kajubi told us. When we asked him about the looming strike among the prisoners, Kajubi told us that he was not aware of it. “I can’t confirm to you that. You know I rarely engage with those people (other prisoners),” Kajubi claimed.
We also spoke to two tabliq Sheikhs who were also sentenced for life imprisonment on terrorism charges. These sheikhs, led by Yunus Kamoga appealed their sentence. They spoke to us on condition of anonymity and told us that, to them, they view whatever is going on as a state plan to make them rot in Luzira. “You know very well our fate with this government, those people are the some (prosecutor and government) they are targeting us. Why are they striking after we put in our appeal? But Allah will assist us,” one of the sheikhs told us.
One of the junior prison officers also took us around the prison where we observed the poor hygiene situation. However, while we were still moving around, a senior prison officer became suspicious about us and started asking us questions.
“But I know you man. You’re a journalist. I always saw you in court. What are you looking for here? How did you come to know this man (the prison officer we were moving with), the senior prison officer asked. Later, prison sources told us that the prisons officer we were moving with was heavily interrogated for moving us around.

A Google maps aerial view of Luzira prison
HEAD COUNTING EVERY HOUR
Previously, before the prosecutor’s strike, prisoners were counted in the morning, at lunch time and in the evening. But the two days we spent in Luzira, we discovered that every two hours, the officers carry out a head count and because of this, visitors who go there to see their colleagues spend a lot of time waiting for the prison administrators to finish the counting.
We talked to a man who traveled from Mbale to see his son who is in Luzira. He told us, “yesterday I was here but I didn’t see my prisoner. I come from Mbale that’s why I decided to sleep around Kampala so as to see my son today. But it seems even today I may not get the chance to see him.”
Visitors are no longer allowed inside the prison with papers, apart from lawyers who are also thoroughly checked. “They fear that some people may smuggle in information to prisoners on how to carry out a successful strike,” our prison source told us.
PRISON SPEAKS OUT
When contacted, Mr. Frank Baine the prison spokesperson confirmed to us that they also live in fear of prisoners striking. “There are over 15,000 prisoners and they are no longer going to court. Some of them actually thought that the problem is with us which is not true,” Baine explained.
He called upon prosecutors to go back to work as government works on their grievances. It should be noted that a Few weeks back, the judiciary suspended prison officers from bringing prisoners in court until the prosecutors came back to work.
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