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Busoga Kingdom has advised the Jinja City Council to give vendors sufficient time and guidance before implementing eviction measures in the city, warning that the current approach risks disrupting the livelihoods of many traders.
According to the kingdom’s second deputy Katukiro Ahmed Noor Osman, even though the vendors are operating illegally, authorities ought to mobilise the vendors and give them time to prepare and vacate road reserves and streets instead of ambushing them.
“We want you to clean the town, and we know it, but it is our appeal as Busoga kingdom that you restrain and give people some time to see how they would prepare and leave because this is where they earn their living,” he urged.
The Katukiro, who owns a building in the central business area on Nizam Road East where he runs a fresh fish outlet, said many people were piling businesses on his verandah, but this did not require ambushing them.
“I also own a business in town, you find people piling businesses on verandahs, which is not good, but you need to prepare people instead of ambushing them, they have nowhere to go, they need time,” he noted.
He was speaking on the sidelines of the Busoga media annual Iftar dinner at the Jinja City Hall on March 15, 2026, where he acknowledged receiving numerous calls from vendors in Bugembe, Namulesa, Mafubira and the Jinja taxi park.

Many vendors, fearing confiscation of their merchandise and losses, quickly removed their kiosks, particularly in Bugembe trading centre. The move created anxiety among locals about the likelihood of rising insecurity since many people, especially youth engaged in chapatti making and chicken roasting, feared for their jobs.
However, Jinja city mayor Alton Kasolo maintained that the city would proceed with enforcement against those who ignored the directive starting today, Monday.
Since Jinja is a tourism destination, he said a trade order was necessary to enable the city to compete with other cities around the world in promoting tourism.