Radio Katwe brings you
the story of the powerful Principal Private Secretary to the President,
Mrs. Amelia Kulubya Kyambadde. Being so close and personal with him for
nearly 30 years now, she is one of the few people who could if she
wanted, write an authoritative biography of Musevenis rule. According to
the modest database that we have pieced together plus the contributions
from some of our readers, Amelia Kyambadde was born into a well-to-do
Baganda family sometime in the late 1950s. She is the eldest child of
the late Serwano-Kulubya of Kulubya and Company Advocates, a law firm.
Her father was a well-connected and influential person in the 1960s UPC
government.
According to this information, Amelia's mother is related to
Museveni's mother and that is where the "Hima" connection comes in.
(With Museveni the confessing "non-sectarian", blood relations seem to
be the rule rather than exception.) Amelia's mother now lives in Sweden
where she is a naturalized Swede. Amelia Kulubya attended Nakasero
Primary School in Kampala in the 1960s. At that time, it was an elite
school for Europeans and only privileged elite Ugandans went to that
school. Amelia used to tell her friends at Nakasero that she had ever
been to Europe, which given the times then, we can take as further
evidence of her prominent background. She then went on to Sacred Heart
Girls' Secondary School in Gulu from 1969 to 1971. She did her O'Level
exams and passed well but did not for some reason want to go back there
for her A'Levels. Some of the classmates of Amelia Kulubya were Jennifer
Kalimuzo, Florence Kikira, Joy Kanyike, and many more who were a year
ahead of Amelia Kulubya. A former schoolmate of hers told Radio Katwe
that Amelia Kulubya "spoke very good English and that was her highest
score in O' Level exams" While in Sacred Heart "she had everything a
young girl could want." This former schoolmate (who seems to be have
known Amelia in Gulu) told Radio Katwe that Amelia was quiet at school,
"friendly to most girls, she did not have the contempt some Southerners
showed towards the Northerners." It is something to note that these
people from Northern Uganda who have faced a bitter and hellish 20 years
of the Museveni rule have this view of Amelia.
In the many comments we
recieved, they spoke well of her. The bitter resentment sometimes
(understandably) shown any westerner or "Southerner" close to Museveni
for abandoning them to the dogs these past two decades is remarkably
absent. She was attractive and many soldiers liked her. One story goes
that while at Sacred Heart Girls', she used to arrive in Gulu in a
family chauffer-driven car around a week before school opened for the
term and spend time with soldiers in their Officers' Mess in town. But
Amelia one of those rare NRM Bantu who is as much liked by the
southerners as the northerners. Somewhere in the mid 1970s, Amelia
Kulubya got married to Wilson Kyambadde. After the fall of Idi Amin in
1979, Amelia worked as a personal secretary to the new Defence Minister,
Yoweri Museveni. When President Godfrey Binaisa transferred Museveni to
become the Minister of Regional Cooperation, the man who does not
respect institutions somehow moved Amelia with him there to work under
him. And Amelia's apparent partiality for soldiers since school at
Sacred Heart had not expired because according to impeccable sources,
during that time in 1979 or 1980, Amelia got pregnant with a child by
Museveni. Among her children are Peter, Ivan, Ishta, Kenny, Amber and
Mike. One of her children (Amber?) today is actually a child of
Museveni. When her boss went to the bush in 1981 to launch his
"fundamental change" rebel war, Amelia fled to exile in 1983 and stayed
with her children in Gottenborg, Sweden, in some lower middle class
flats not far from where the Museveni family was also staying. When the
"fundamental change" that 20 years on has left Kampala in darkness began
in 1986, Amelia resumed her job of working under Museveni. What Radio
Katwe is not sure about is when Janet Museveni first came to know the
full significance of her husbands "working" position in relation to
Amelia. It seems that was recent, when Amelia had to flee to London for a
brief "vacation" until Janets wrath came under some control. In 1994 or
1995 when Natasha Museveni was sent to London to study fashion (what a
waste of tax payers' money, when you look at the poor quality of dresses
produced by the now, thankfully, defunct House of Kaine!), State House
was worried that Natasha would be lonely. So the state arranged for
scholarships for Amelia's daughter, Ishta Kyambadde and Josephine
Wapakhabulo, a daughter of the late NRM heavyweight James Wapakhabulo,
to go and study in the UK but some speculate that one of the intended
side-benefits of these two was to keep Natasha company. In 1996, Amelia
went to Makerere University to do a Bachelors in Business
Administration. One contributor to Radio Katwe claims that in 1998
during her third year "she had as many as 24 retakes." Whereas anything
is possible, one wonders at the credibility of that abnormally high
number of retakes. As PPS to the President, Amelia is tough toward the
staff around Museveni. Reports from State House say that Amelia has on
ocassion treated people like Presidential Press Secretary Onapito
Ekomoloit and Media Centre Director Robert Kabushenga like small
children, shouting at them in front of their colleagues. So that is
Amelia for you. By all accounts professional and a generally nice
person. A rare thing to say about anyone so close to Museveni. O how one
wishes some of her would have rubbed off on her boss of all these
years...!
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