Rev. Nathan Mulondo, the secretary in charge of education, says Namirembe Diocese, which is the founding body of the school, is concerned about the allegations that have stemmed from a social media post by a parent at the school.
Namirembe Diocese has commenced investigations into the homosexuality complaints against some staff members and learners at King's
College Budo, one of the prestigious schools in Uganda.
Rev. Nathan Mulondo, the secretary in charge of education,
says Namirembe Diocese, which is the founding body of the school, is concerned about the allegations that have stemmed from a social media post by a parent at the school.
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At the beginning of this week, the said parent took to social media platforms claiming that one of the teachers at the school has been sodomizing his son.
“The teacher of Kings college Budo
Has been sodomizing my Son for four years now. My son got problems going to the
toilet so I took him to Mulago hospital because I have my relative doctor
there. They found him with STI commonly found in gay men,” the post that went viral on social media read.
According to Rev Mulondo, although they have some queries about the message, is a fact that homosexuality is taking root in
many schools across the country including church-founded schools. He adds
that if any report is made formally or informally they should be taken
seriously and probed to reach the bottom of the problem.
He, however, raises concern on the
post questioning why the parent failed to report this case for the last four
years her child has been suffering.
“These are all lines of
investigations. In the post, it is said that there was some victimization and we
cannot rule out that this can happen. That is why we need to look at this issue. The investigations will involve different people, from management, PTA, body of
governors and diocese,” the priest stated.
Our efforts to contact the
school administrators including the headteacher, John Fred Kazibwe were futile. However, following the social media post, a letter purportedly issued by the headteacher started doing rounds on social media indicating that the school
was confirming the complaints by the parent.
Authorities at the school, including
members of the school board, have however dismissed the letter as a forgery by people with ill intentions. When asked on the matter, the Old
Budonians Club President, Jimmy Katenda, who is also a member of the school
board of governor told our reporter that the school’s top organ could not
comment on the matter at the moment.
He however also pointed out that
there were several ongoing meetings to reach “the bottom of the problem.” Allegations of homosexuality at
Budo, specifically, are not new. In the past years, there have been reports about this problem in the school but scant information has been given by the
administrators. For instance, in 2021 when fire gutted the school for the
third time in a space of one month, this issue was pointed out.
Sources in the police who were
investigating the fire pointed out that it had started after the administrators expelled six students who beat up a male student for
engaging in homosexuality. During an interview with a local newspaper, Patrick
Bakka Male, the then-school headteacher (now deceased), confirmed that they had
expelled students for beating up their colleague they suspected of sodomy.
However, he said the students did not have evidence that the accused was actually involved in the practice. Founded in 1906, King’s College
Budo was started as a boys’ only school for the sons of chiefs and Kings. In 1934 girls were also admitted, making it a mixed-sex school.
It should be noted that homosexuality allegations have been
part of the school right from its old days. Carol Summers captured the
allegation in a research paper titled; 'Subterranean Evil' and 'Tumultuous
Riot' in Buganda: Authority and Alienation at King's College, Budo, 1942. Summers referred to the vice as one of the many issues that led to the riot
that saw the school being closed on the eve of the Kabaka Edward Muteesa II
coronation.
The researcher pointed out that in
1942, the school head prefect pointed to homosexuality among the boys,
authorities- prefects, African teachers, and white government employees. He also
told of a student that had been found while in the act.
Back then, the vice
also involved favors in the form of gifts and more. Pastor Solomon Male, an
anti-homosexuality activist, says that many times parents and other members of
the public shy away from discussing this elephant in the room to an extent of mocking those who point out such schools where the vice is thriving.
In his view, even the investigations
like the one instituted by Namirembe Diocese might not help in solving the
problem given the fact that a handful of "incidents" of the vice gets
reported. He, however, advises that there is a need to proactively combat the
vice other than applying reactionary methods when a case is reported.
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Indeed, as pastor Male points out, this will not be the first time that a school has been the
subject of a homosexuality probe. For instance, a similar investigation into
four prestigious secondary schools in the Kampala and Wakiso districts was
launched in 2013 over reports that their students were involved in gay
activities. These included Gayaza High School, Makerere Secondary School,
Kibuli High, and Naalya Secondary School.
At that time the then-the State
Minister for Ethics and Integrity, Rev. Father Simon Peter Lokodo, revealed
that a team from the Department of Ethics and Education had discovered a high
percentage of students involved in lesbianism and homosexuality. However, it
appears that the issue was not publicly addressed and no report was produced
from the investigations.
Instead, similar cases of this type of sexual deviation
have been reported in other schools over time.
Rev Mulondo believes that hiding or
concealing vices within a school or organization can actually make the problem
worse over time and that making these issues public could help address them
more effectively.
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In Uganda, homosexuality is still
considered illegal. The Uganda Anti-Homosexuality Act of 2014 was
invalidated on procedural grounds by the Constitutional Court in 2016. However, Homosexuality remains criminalized under the Penal Code Act as a crime against
morality.
This means that individuals who engage in homosexuality can still
be prosecuted under the law. In the same development, there is a
group of people who think that the current scandal being raised might have a
hidden motive.
For instance, a parent, who preferred anonymity,
believes that although the allegations of homosexuality might be true having
heard it himself, there might also be someone or a group of people using it to
bring down the newly-appointed headteacher, John Fred Kazibwe.
“There is a lot of politics involved
in these schools and the headmaster, who is relatively new, might be facing
pressure from other parties. and I will not be surprised if this entire mayhem
ends up in his neck,” the parent noted.
John Fred Kazibwe, the former
headteacher of Mengo Secondary school, was appointed headteacher at Budo in
2021 following the retirement of Bakka, the college’s 13th leader who had been
at the helm of the school since 2008.