Supporters of jailed Ugandan opposition figure pray for him after president tries to stop it

In a remarkable display of defiance, hundreds of Ugandan activists gathered Monday at Kampala’s Lubaga Cathedral for an impromptu prayer vigil demanding the release of imprisoned opposition leader Kizza Besigye. The event unfolded after Archbishop Paul Ssemogerere unexpectedly postponed a scheduled mass following alleged presidential intervention.

The planned religious service was intended to highlight Besigye’s deteriorating health after more than a year in detention without trial on treason charges. Instead, supporters transformed the cathedral into a venue of peaceful resistance, singing hymns and praying under the leadership of Winnie Byanyima, Besigye’s wife and UNAIDS executive director.

Byanyima revealed to attendees that President Yoweri Museveni had personally requested the postponement pending an investigation into the event’s political nature. ‘We are here unable to have the Mass because of the order of our president,’ she stated, while encouraging continued prayer.

The 69-year-old opposition figure, once Museveni’s personal physician during the guerrilla war that brought him to power in 1986, now faces capital charges alleging he plotted to overthrow the government. Besigye has appeared recently in court using a wheelchair, with bail repeatedly denied despite growing calls for compassionate release due to his declining health.

Presidential spokesperson Sandor Walusimbi offered no comment on the day’s developments. Meanwhile, Museveni’s son, General Muhoozi Kainerugaba, Uganda’s top military commander, has publicly labeled Besigye ‘a dead man walking’ and accused him of plotting presidential assassination.

This incident occurs against the backdrop of Museveni’s recent election victory, where he secured a seventh term with 71% of votes amid allegations of electoral interference and the subsequent disappearance of main opposition rival Bobi Wine.