Security agencies on Friday night released the Victoria University vice-chancellor Dr. Lawrence Muganga who was picked from his offices on Thursday.
Muganga was received by Rajiv Ruparelia the Managing Director of Ruparelia Group of Companies. Victoria University is owned by Sudhir Ruparelia..
In a short video posted on social media, Dr. Muganga who was in the company of businessman Frank Gashumba thanked all members of the public who had stood by him.
“I am back but it was because of you. Thank you from the bottom of my heart. I am still alive, happy, determined and I can always count on you brothers and sisters. This man here (Frank Gashumba) and others out there, you are great and I am forever indebted to you,” Muganga said.
Gashumba thanked media houses, the Facebook community, and everyone else across the various social media platforms who put their voices and power together to push for the release of Dr. Muganga following his unlawful arrest and detention.
“The power belongs to the people, and none of this would have happened without all your efforts,” Gashumba said.
He noted that they would be releasing a statement on Saturday on the matter.
Gashumba also thanked President Yoweri Museveni for the intervention in the matter.
“We would also like to thank President Yoweri Museveni for his intervention in the matter that saw the immediate release of Muganga. God bless you all, and God bless and protect our country,” he added.
Muganga was arrested on Thursday in what the Defence Spokesperson On Thursday, Defence Spokesperson Brig. Flavia Byekwaso in a telephone interview said was in connection with illegal stay and espionage.
“He was arrested by Joint Security Forces in connection with espionage and illegal stay in the country. Investigations into the matter have commenced. His status in Uganda is not clear because he holds a foreign passport and has no work permit.”
However, sources in the security who spoke to the New Vision noted that President Yoweri Museveni was personally irritated over the modus of the arrest and directed for his immediate release.
Dr. Muganga’s arrest had also drawn wide condemnation from his family members and academic staff who questioned why the security did not just summon him but rather resorted to inhuman arrest.
On Friday, family members led by Bruno Makyabire (nephew) and Muganga’s sister Hellen Batambuze who were flanked by their lawyer Isaac Ssemakade and Gashumba appealed to the Government agencies holding him to allow them access.
“Muganga is my uncle and I have known him all my life and I am a very fully grown old man now with children. On Thursday I received a very terrifying phone call from someone that my uncle was being dragged at the stairs of Victoria University by armed men. It was not a good day because I believe that a person of his stature should have been treated like that. If he hasn’t resisted arrest nor been summoned, you don’t kidnap him,” Makyabire said.
Ssemakade noted Muganga’s arrest was similar to the kidnap of the vice-chancellor of Makerere University, Frank Kalimuzo who was a close friend of Idi Amin and disappeared.
Gashumba condemned security over how they had effected the arrest. He also noted that the move by security to arrest Muganga was part of the wider scheme to implicate the Banyarwanda in acts of espionage and make them a hated tribe in Uganda.
One of those friends who had put up a spirited fight for his release was Annet Ojede who noted that Muganga had good intentions to give back to Uganda which did welcome him as a child refugee.
“I received some shocking news about the arrest of one of my good friends, Dr. Muganga, who grew up in Uganda as a child refugee when his family fled Rwanda due to civil conflicts. Some of his siblings were also born in Uganda. Lawrence went to school in Uganda from primary up to the university and that is the only country he and his family called home. To charge a man who grew up in the country for over thirty years before he left for Canada for graduate studies is outlandish and quite frankly sounds ridiculous,”
Ojede said that he came to know Muganga when they were both second-year students at Makerere University.
“Lawrence was in social sciences majoring in economics. I took several classes with him, prepared for several exams while studying together. We became very good friends. Upon graduation, Lawrence worked for a couple of years before going back to pursue his MA degree in economic policy and planning from Makerere University. When I was a professor of economics at Long Beach State, Lawrence contacted me for a letter of recommendation for admission into the PH.D. Program in Educational Policy and Management at the University of Alberta. I wrote a letter describing our experiences as students in Makerere and how I witnessed first-hand his work ethic. He was accepted and he did very well in both course work and dissertation,” Ojede noted.
She noted that it was probable that he is being misunderstood. “I could be wrong and that is why, we as his friends, are waiting for all the facts to come out. Dr. Muganga, we are rooting for you and we wish you well throughout your struggles and we will continue praying for your safety,” she added.