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Anthony Wameli Biography, Early Life, Education – Who is Anthony Wameli.

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Who is Anthony Wameli Yeboah?

Full details of Anthony Wameli Biography, Anthony Wameli is a Ugandan politician, attorney, a senior lawyer at Wameli & Co Advocates and Solicitors, Kampala Uganda, a businessman and a human rights advocate.

Anthony Wameli Biography

Early Life and Education

Anthony Wameli Yeboah was born in Namisindwa District, Bugishu Sub-Region in the Eastern part of Uganda. Wameli attended Kamwokya Islamic Nursery and Primary School; then City High School, Kololo from where he proceeded to Busoga and Tororo Colleges for his O’ Level education.

Wameli, then joined Uganda Martyrs High School Rubaga, for his A’ Level education. After, Wameli got admitted for a Bachelor of Arts Degree at Makerere University. However, he never pursued education to the end.

He was given the Education day programme, private sponsorship but half sponsored by the university because his mother was a secretary at the school of education. However, his mother had a dream one day, in the first two weeks of study at the university and this dream; his mother saw a big word “Justice”.

So when she saw that word in the dream she woke up and told his son that “I think u need to change the course and study Law”. But Wameli protested at first arguing that the course was so expensive, long study period, and very tough as compared to education saying he can’t handle it.

However, his mother insisted and finally he had to take on the law course. Wameli studied for a bachelor’s degree in Law at Makerere University from 2000-2004. 

After, he proceeded to the Law Development Center, Kampala Uganda. 

Wameli as well as a Certificate in International Human Rights and Good governance from Copenhagen Business School. Master’s Program (Master) Domestic Human Rights, Makerere University.

Work and Experience

Anthony Wameli Yeboah is the founder and Managing Partner, Wameli & Co. Advocates which employs 8 Advocates and has nurtured over 300 advocates through internship and practice. Wameli’s legal firm began in August 2008. 

Wameli has served as a lawyer for over 13 years with a wide range of experience, including representing suspects with high profile cases like terrorism and treason.

He served as a Magistrate Grade 1 in the Chief Magistrate of Nakasongola for about 3 years that’s in September 2009-April 2011. He retired and embarked on his legal practice and to focus on his law firm something he does best.

Wameli is a general practitioner but has a bias in constitutional law, Human Rights Defense, High profile criminal Defense and Land Laws. Sometimes you will find him in the Magistrates court, in the Labour court, and by the time he takes up your case, you will be speaking the same language.

By the time Wameli completed University he had turned Born Again, a very prayerful and religious fellow and still is. He was involved in a Christian gospel Mission in Tororo after university.

 Wameli did not look for a job after his Bachelor in Law; he was called for a job at a law firm in Kampala while in Tororo on a Christian gospel mission.

Wameli left Tororo, came back to Kampala and met a gentleman called Lutiba Daniel who had called him for a job, a very wonderful man with his wife Patricia as he describes them. 

By then the law firm was called Omuni Legal advocates before it changed to Lutiba and Co. Advocates. “So, he asked me whether I wanted to work, I said yes I want, he asked me whether I was a born again, I said you called me from a mission ground, I have been preaching. He said you have the job, so the following day I started working with Omuni Legal Advocates”.

But serving as an attorney was not enough for Wameli, he thought of becoming a judicial officer and hopefully, he applied for the job of a Magistrate.

However, by the time Wameli applied he had not yet obtained his certificate for LDC, he had completed and waiting for graduation. He dropped in an application for a Magistrates post when he didn’t have enough paperwork, one of them was pending, and that’s the LDC Certificate. 

But by faith, he applied for the post, after two years after he had graduated, enrolled as an advocate at the High Court of Uganda, working with his company Wameli and Company Advocates; Wameli received a text message from the Judicial Service Commission inviting him for an interview.

Wameli was offered the Magistrates post after the interview.

By the time he became a Magistrate, he already had a Law Firm and he thought someone would buy out his interest in his law firm, continue with the law firm serving the people and also make some money as the owner but he failed to get that person, he failed to get that deal through.

His dream to serve as a lawyer continued to haunt Wameli and every day he would resign as a magistrate because he needed to be sure he continued working.

One day he made up his mind to either choose to be a practitioner in private practice or to be a judicial officer, and he chose private practice. Wameli who did not have any regret while serving as a magistrate is now into private legal practice.

His admirations for senior lawyers have seen him handle high profile cases. Wameli always makes sure that his clients commit themselves to him as their lawyer.

Wameli’s legal practice is not only about earning money, if it was he would be very rich but in some cases, he does it to deliver justice to the needy people in the country to help them get justice. 

Other Responsibilities

Apart from legal practice, Wameli was a gospel preacher who liked performing Christian ministry work mostly at Ebenezer Christian Fellowship in Kayanya. 

He is a very prayerful man.

Skills and Endorsements

  • Law
  • Data Privacy
  • Dispute Resolution

Industry Knowledge

  • Litigation
  • Due Diligence
  • Litigation Support
  • Legal Document Preparation
  • Corporate Governance

Interpersonal Skills

  • Mediation
  • Contractual Agreements

Politics

Anthony Wameli was the National Unity Platform (NUP)/People Power Movement lawyer. He and others represented and currently representing NUP jailed supporters. 

Wameli was also the lead lawyer representing Robert Kyagulanyi Ssentamu aka Bobi Wine’s election petition case filed to the Supreme Court seeking nullification of  Museveni’s victory who has been in power for 37 years through the 14 January 2021 polls.

Known for being a human rights lawyer, Mr Wameli shot to Limelight several years ago when he represented suspects accused of killing the Assistant Inspector General of Police (AIGP), Andrew Felix Kaweesi. 

Mr Wameli was currently representing the alleged rebel leader of the Allied Democratic Forces Jamil Mukulu. He was also representing former presidential candidate Gen Henry Tumukunde treason case.

Uganda’s elections were marred by violence ahead of polling day as well as an internet shutdown that remained in force until four days after the vote. Social media sites remained restricted, opened later but Facebook remains closed, according to the government Facebook is the leading platform for propaganda and inciting violence.

Police surrounded Bobi Wine’s home for days after the elections, with authorities citing an urgent need to prevent him from leading protests. They withdrew from Wine’s residence last week after a judge ruled that Wine’s home is not a detention facility. 

The legal team under this case was led by Anthony Wameli.

Family

Anthony Wameli was married with three sons

Sports

Anthony Wameli was a soccer fan who subscribe to the Manchester United football team.

Also Read;

Political persecution of Bobi wine Supporters | Comrade Sanya Muhydin inside courtroom.

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When Elections Are Stolen and Voices Are Silenced: What Citizens Must Do to Reclaim Their Country

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Across history, there comes a moment in every nation when citizens must confront a difficult truth: the systems meant to protect democracy have been captured. Elections no longer represent the will of the people. Courts become instruments of power. Security forces are deployed not to defend the nation but to intimidate the nation’s own citizens.

In such circumstances, people begin to ask a profound question:

What can citizens do when democratic channels are blocked?

This question is not unique to Uganda. Nations across the world have faced similar moments. In the Philippines, millions rose peacefully during the People Power Revolution and forced the removal of Ferdinand Marcos. In Sudan, sustained civic resistance during the Sudanese Revolution brought down Omar al-Bashir after three decades in power. In Eastern Europe, millions withdrew cooperation from communist regimes, triggering the collapse of governments once believed to be permanent.

These examples reveal a powerful lesson: dictatorships survive only as long as society continues to cooperate with them.

When that cooperation begins to collapse, even the most entrenched regimes start to weaken.

This article is not a call for violence. History shows that violent revolutions often lead to devastating consequences and prolonged instability. Instead, this is a strategic reflection on how citizens organize, mobilize, and reclaim their countries through collective civic power.

For Ugandans who seek change, the struggle requires clarity, unity, patience, and courage.

Understanding the Reality of Authoritarian Power

Before discussing what citizens must do, it is important to understand a fundamental truth about authoritarian systems.

A dictatorship is not sustained by one individual alone. It is supported by a network of institutions and actors, including:

security forces government officials business elites state media civil servants political loyalists

If these pillars continue to function normally, the system remains stable.

But if enough people withdraw cooperation from these pillars, the system begins to crack.

Political scholar Gene Sharp studied hundreds of movements worldwide and concluded that the most successful struggles against authoritarian rule rely on organized non-violent resistance and mass civic participation.

The key is not isolated protest.

The key is strategic, nationwide civic action.

What Ugandans Must Understand About Power

Power does not only exist in State House, parliament, or military barracks.

Power exists in:

the markets the streets universities workplaces churches and mosques taxi parks villages and towns

A government ultimately depends on the cooperation of its citizens to function.

When citizens become organized and coordinated, they possess a form of power that even heavily armed regimes struggle to control.

What Citizens Must Begin to Do

1. Build Unity Across All Divisions

One of the greatest strengths of authoritarian regimes is division among the people.

Citizens are divided by:

ethnicity religion region political parties class

As long as people remain divided, resistance remains weak.

But when citizens begin to see themselves first as Ugandans with a shared destiny, the dynamic changes completely.

Successful civic movements always create broad coalitions that include:

youth movements workers and labor unions students religious leaders professionals artists and cultural voices rural communities

The moment a movement becomes national rather than partisan, its power multiplies.

2. Withdraw Cooperation From Oppression

Authoritarian systems rely on the routine cooperation of ordinary people.

Citizens unknowingly sustain oppressive systems through daily participation.

History shows that withdrawing cooperation can be one of the most powerful tools available to citizens.

This can take many forms:

peaceful strikes by workers refusal to participate in corrupt systems boycotts of regime-connected businesses collective civic actions that demonstrate public dissatisfaction

When such actions spread widely across society, governments face enormous pressure.

The economic and administrative machinery of the state begins to slow.

3. Control the Narrative

Dictatorships depend heavily on controlling information.

State propaganda attempts to shape how citizens perceive reality.

Independent voices are often silenced or intimidated.

But modern citizens possess tools that previous generations did not.

Information can spread through:

independent journalism diaspora media networks social platforms citizen documentation of abuses international advocacy

When the truth about repression becomes widely known—both domestically and internationally—it undermines the regime’s legitimacy.

4. Organize, Not Just Protest

Spontaneous protests can express anger, but lasting change requires organization.

Citizens must build structured networks capable of sustained action.

These networks may include:

civic organizations youth movements professional associations community leadership groups grassroots mobilization teams

Organization transforms frustration into strategic pressure.

Without organization, movements quickly lose momentum.

5. Build Parallel Civic Structures

When official institutions no longer represent the people, societies often begin creating alternative civic structures.

These may include:

independent community organizations grassroots leadership councils civic education networks volunteer community services

Such structures strengthen civil society and gradually reduce dependence on state-controlled institutions.

6. Encourage Courage Within Institutions

Many people within government institutions quietly disagree with authoritarian leadership but feel isolated or fearful.

History shows that change often accelerates when individuals inside institutions begin to question orders or withdraw loyalty.

This does not happen overnight.

But when citizens demonstrate unity and determination, it can inspire cracks within the ruling system.

7. Maintain Strategic Discipline

One of the most common mistakes resistance movements make is allowing anger to turn into uncontrolled confrontation.

Authoritarian regimes often provoke violence intentionally because it allows them to justify brutal crackdowns.

Disciplined movements focus on:

maintaining non-violent methods protecting civilians preserving moral legitimacy

This approach strengthens public support both domestically and internationally.

8. Learn From Other Nations

Africa itself offers powerful examples of citizen movements.

In Burkina Faso, a popular uprising in 2014 forced the resignation of Blaise Compaoré after nearly three decades in power.

In Sudan, civic groups, professionals, and youth organizations sustained protests that eventually removed Omar al-Bashir.

In the Philippines, millions of citizens peacefully occupied streets during the People Power Revolution, leading to the fall of Ferdinand Marcos.

These movements succeeded because citizens became organized, united, and persistent.

The Long Road to Change

It is important for citizens to understand that the struggle for democratic change is rarely quick.

Many successful movements took years—sometimes decades.

There will be setbacks.

There will be moments of fear.

There will be attempts to divide the people.

But history consistently shows that no regime can permanently govern against the will of a united population.

The real question is not whether change is possible.

The real question is whether citizens are prepared to organize patiently and strategically to achieve it.

The Responsibility of Every Ugandan

The future of any nation is ultimately shaped not only by its leaders but by the courage and determination of its citizens.

Every generation reaches a point where it must decide:

Will we accept the situation as permanent?

Or will we work collectively to build the country we want?

The path toward democratic transformation requires:

unity discipline organization courage persistence

When citizens recognize their collective strength and act together, history has shown that even the most entrenched systems of power can change.

The story of Uganda’s future will not be written by one individual.

It will be written by millions of citizens who decide that their nation deserves better.

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Museveni fighting for political oxygen

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Just look at this graphic.

From FY 2020/21 to FY 2025/26, Museveni has splashed a staggering UGX 865 BILLION under the pretense of “donations.”

Did you read that right? 865 BILLION SHILLINGS!

Let’s stop calling these donations.

They are not.

This is raw, shameless political bribery.

Museveni is not giving back to Ugandans—he’s buying loyalty. He is using your taxes to buy time. To buy silence. To buy relevance.

This isn’t leadership. It’s desperation.

While He Buys Praise, The Country Bleeds

Teachers are working without pay or teaching materials. Nurses and midwives are underpaid, overworked, and insulted by a failed system. Doctors are fleeing Uganda for greener pastures due to poverty-level salaries and zero equipment. Public schools are falling apart, with children learning under trees—no toilets, no books, no desks. Hospitals across the country don’t have gloves, medicine, or even beds.

And yet, Museveni keeps throwing billions around as if this is a game.

The PDM Lie – A Grand Scam in Plain Sight

The so-called Parish Development Model (PDM) was introduced as the “magic bullet” for rural development.

Museveni pumped UGX 100 million into parishes across the country—a laughable amount when you consider some parishes serve over 10,000 people.

What’s worse?

He spends billions more just to inspect the delivery of this token!

He travels with over 50 fuel-guzzling vehicles, wasting tens of millions of shillings per trip, just to “check” on a 100 million handout.

Let’s break it down:

This is the equivalent of flying a private jet across the country to deliver a single loaf of bread.

Where Could UGX 865 Billion Have Gone?

As a supporter of People Power and a proud member of the National Unity Platform (NUP), I ask:

What if that money had been used for actual nation-building?

Hundreds of functional health centers could have been constructed. Thousands of rural pit latrines could have saved children from disease. Classrooms, teachers’ houses, textbooks, and school feeding programs could have transformed education. Doctors, teachers, and nurses could have been paid well and on time.

But Museveni chose bribes over nation-building.

This Is Not Leadership – It’s Panic

Museveni is not leading.

He is surviving.

He is not serving Uganda—he is choking it for air as Bobi Wine and the People Power movement continue to rise.

He’s not responding with policies or vision.

He’s responding with donation stunts, stage-managed tours, and brown envelopes to buy headlines.

This is the behaviour of a man fighting for political oxygen, not fighting for your future.

To Every Ugandan Reading This:

That money he throws around?

It’s yours.

The taxes you pay on fuel, airtime, water, and food are being used to fund his survival tactics.

He’s not helping you.

He’s helping himself stay in power.

And while he clings to power like a drowning man, your children are learning in dust and disease. Your mothers are dying in hospitals with no medicine. Your future is being auctioned off for political mileage.

ENOUGH IS ENOUGH.

Uganda cannot and will never develop under this Museveni system.

We need transformation, not manipulation.

We need investment, not bribery.

We need justice, not favours.

We need a Uganda where leaders are accountable, not untouchable.

Where money is used to build, not to bribe.

Where power is won through service, not survival tricks.

I remain,

#JBMuwonge

#PeoplePowerOurPower

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NUP/People Power Archives

Screams from Exile: Ugandans Abroad Declare War on Western-Backed Tyranny.

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Ugandans residing in the diaspora have taken it upon themselves to expose what they see as one of the greatest betrayals of modern African democracy the continued funding and support of African dictatorships by Western nations, especially the brutal regime of General Yoweri Kaguta Museveni. For decades, these courageous Ugandans have organized demonstrations outside embassies, high commissions, and notably outside Uganda House in London, carrying placards, chanting freedom slogans, and calling on the international community to halt its enabling role in sustaining one of Africa’s longest-surviving autocracies.

These protests are not mere acts of symbolism. They are expressions of deep-rooted frustration, sorrow, and outrage. They are a direct response to decades of betrayal, impunity, and bloodshed. These brave men and women many of whom were forced into exile due to political persecution have vowed to remain the voice of the voiceless back home. Their unwavering activism speaks not only to the resilience of the Ugandan spirit but also to the urgent need for global accountability.

39 Years of Tyranny, Museveni’s Brutal Legacy

General Yoweri Museveni came to power in 1986, promising democracy, freedom, and a fundamental change in the governance of Uganda. Four decades later, the reality could not be more disheartening. What began as a supposed liberation movement soon devolved into a regime characterized by severe repression, widespread corruption, militarism, nepotism, and a horrifying disregard for basic human rights.

Museveni’s rule has been marked by the persecution of journalists, arbitrary arrests of opposition leaders, the assassination and abduction of political dissidents, and the militarization of civilian life. Security operatives and military personnel act with impunity, abducting youth, torturing civilians, and suppressing dissent all under the guise of maintaining national security.

What is even more disturbing is that all this is happening under the watchful eye of the international community, with funding, training, and arms supplied in large part by Western allies such as the United States and the United Kingdom.

Western Hypocrisy, Aiding Dictators While Preaching Democracy

The Uganda diaspora accuses Western powers of blatant hypocrisy, championing democratic values at home while enabling autocratic regimes abroad. Year after year, millions of dollars flow from Western coffers into Museveni’s government under the pretense of promoting development, security, and good governance. In reality, much of this aid is diverted to strengthen Museveni’s grip on power. It bankrolls the military, funds the police state, and reinforces the very institutions responsible for silencing Uganda’s pro-democracy movement.

From the iron-fisted crackdowns on peaceful protests to the brutal imprisonment of political opponents such as the countless supporters of Hon. Robert Kyagulanyi Ssentamu, popularly known as Bobi Wine there is overwhelming evidence that Western funds are aiding repression rather than reform.

The Ugandan diaspora, therefore, poses an important question: How can the West claim to support democracy and human rights while simultaneously sponsoring a dictator who has turned Uganda into a blood-soaked prison for dissenters?

The Price of Silence, A Catalogue of Atrocities

The diaspora protests are driven not by politics, but by pain. The pain of lost loved ones. The pain of young lives cut short. The pain of mothers crying for disappeared sons. Under Museveni’s regime, extrajudicial killings, disappearances, abductions, and torture have become routine. The government targets not criminals, but young Ugandans who dare to dream of a better future. Young people whose only crime is wearing red berets, chanting People Power, or aligning with the opposition National Unity Platform (NUP).

Families are torn apart as security forces abduct and detain activists incommunicado. Torture chambers infamously known as safe houses are used to crush the spirit of resistance. The judiciary, now an extension of the executive, offers no justice. The legislature has been reduced to a rubber stamp. Civil society is under siege.

It is this horrifying reality that propels Ugandans abroad into the streets. Their protests are a cry for the world to open its eyes to the genocide unfolding in slow motion.

Complicity by the West, When Aid Becomes a Weapon

What the diaspora is making clear through their activism is that Western funding is not neutral. It comes with consequences. Financial aid that goes into the hands of a tyrant becomes a weapon of oppression. The diaspora protesters argue that this aid is not only misappropriated but extended with either gross negligence or deliberate complicity. After all, how can nations with advanced diplomatic and intelligence machinery be unaware of what their money is funding?

The Group of Seven (G7) nations, along with institutions such as the World Bank and IMF, must be held to account for the roles they play. The diaspora’s call is straightforward: Stop financing the suffering of Ugandans. Stop aiding Museveni’s dictatorship.

A Global Appeal: Redefining International Solidarity

These demonstrations by Ugandans in the diaspora are not merely internal affairs. They are part of a broader global appeal to redefine international solidarity. In an era where democracy promotion has become a buzzword, the Ugandan crisis forces a moral reckoning. The West must ask itself whether it truly believes in democracy for all or only for its own citizens.

The diaspora calls upon Western citizens, human rights organizations, international media, and progressive governments to stand in solidarity with the Ugandan people. Not with empty words, but with action. With sanctions on individuals responsible for atrocities. With investigations into foreign aid misuse. With diplomatic pressure. With suspension of military cooperation. But most importantly to stop being the pay master of our oppressors

Voices from the Frontline: The Courage of the Diaspora

What makes this movement particularly remarkable is the personal cost paid by those involved. Many of the protesters were once victims themselves exiled journalists, tortured youth, threatened activists, and political asylum seekers. They have rebuilt their lives abroad but remain tethered to Uganda by an unbreakable thread of love, pain, and duty.

Their protests are not performative they are acts of resistance and remembrance. Every chant outside Uganda House is a tribute to a disappeared brother. Every placard is a call to bring back tortured sisters. Every march is an affirmation that Uganda will one day be free.

United Kingdom Leads the Charge

The United Kingdom has become a key battleground for this diaspora-led movement. Outside Uganda House in London, a defiant crowd gathers regularly to remind the world of Uganda’s suffering. With drums, megaphones, Ugandan flags, and revolutionary songs, these patriots have turned the streets into a courtroom, the placards into affidavits, and the slogans into testimonies.

They have refused to be silent. They have refused to let the memory of the dead fade. They have refused to let the world normalize dictatorship. For this, they deserve not just applause but our deepest respect.

The Final Message: It’s Time to Choose

To the Western powers: the time has come to choose. Will you stand with the people of Uganda, or will you continue funding their oppressor? Will you support democracy in practice or only in theory? Will you champion human rights universally or selectively?

The diaspora has spoken with clarity, conviction, and courage. Now it is time for the international community to listen and to act.

To all our comrades in the United Kingdom and around the world who continue to raise their voices against tyranny your fight is just, your efforts are noble, and your courage is the torch lighting the way to a free Uganda.

Mwebale nnyo. We shall overcome.

Jbmuwonge, Social Activist.

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