By NATION CORRESPONDENT
Posted Sunday, August 4 2013 at 23:30
Posted Sunday, August 4 2013 at 23:30
According to Sunday Monitor newspaper,
Ugandan deputy commissioner of police stormed Brig Ggwanga’s residence
in Kizungu, directing that the retired officer vacates the plot of land
he is occupying for it belonged to the former president.
Brig Ggwanga however opposed the eviction claiming that Mr Mugabi and his team had gone to his house without any court order.
“They came here without any instrument claiming I
was staying in Mr Kibaki’s house. I told them to go to Mengo and find
out who leased this property for 49 years,” Brig Ggwanga said during the
Thursday incident.
It was later established that Mr Mugabi’s team
seemed to have mixed up the plot numbers as the document they had showed
plots number 273 and 732 instead of 461.
“This is my property. Have I gone to Kikuyu land
to claim ownership of a house there? How did Kibaki acquire this
property?” the retired brigadier asked.
He said he had so far stayed in the same house for
20 years and would stay in the same house, “and even renew my lease
after 49 years have elapsed”.
When the police spokesperson, Ms Judith Nabakooba,
was contacted, she said she was not aware of the operation to evict
Brig Ggwanga.
Asked whether he pulled out his gun and chased the
security personnel, Brig Ggwanga said: “I didn’t do that. I only told
them to vacate my premises because they were disturbing my peace.”
Brig Ggwanga said the officers said they had come
to evict him from a property in Lukuli, a low-end suburb “yet I stay in
Kizungu”, an up-scale area.
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