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Showing posts from June, 2020

How many victims will it take for clubs to wake up?

Immanuel Ben Misagga Shortly after last week’s meeting between Fufa and Uganda Premier League (UPL) clubs, two club owners who participated in the meeting told me how the two sides had ceased fire.  They even talked about how calm and respectful Moses Magogo was throughout, far from his arrogant posture of defiance while fending off calls for resignation after serving a one-month conviction for fraud. I laughed out very hard because I knew these club owners don’t understand Magogo and his crafty machinations. The Magogo I know can give you Shs 1m and use Shs 10m to fight you. So, I assured them that the vindictive nature of Magogo knows no boundaries and he had set up a booby trap for the ‘ringleaders.’ Less than 24 hours later, a dossier circulated on social media accusing Diana Nyago, the Busoga United boss, of all sorts of wrongs with the club. Shortly after, another letter emerged that the Busoga kingdom had withdrawn its name from the club. What a coincidence that all this happene

It is time to separate men from boys in club football

Immanuel Ben Misagga It is a foregone conclusion that clubs in the topflight of Uganda football will never be united until institutional clubs agree to a shared responsibility when the going gets tough in times of injustice. Over the last decade, clubs such as KCCA, Police FC and URA FC have always shunned any efforts to rally behind other clubs.  Those clubs that attended the meeting are chaired by unprincipled, conflicted and are mere budget managers that can afford to front personal interests over institutional interests of the league.  Inside their heart of hearts they support the cause of other clubs but are unable to pronounce themselves because of selfish interests In that regard, it came as no surprise last week when leaders of the aforementioned clubs tried to woo other Uganda Premier League clubs to join a meeting with a panicky Fufa, under pressure to be ethical. The real shocker was having SC Villa and Vipers there as the rest of UPL clubs boycotted this sham meeting purpor

Clubs shouldn’t waste this golden chance to free themselves from Fufa

Immanuel Ben Misagga You only need to have followed Ugandan football in the past few months to understand that club football is in the shackles of Fufa. Fufa controls the sponsorship, registration, management and administration of all Uganda Premier League (UPL) clubs. On top of that, Fufa holds veto powers over any decision made by clubs. I don’t think there is any country in the world where such an arrangement that I equate to slavery exists. But in Uganda, everything is possible. Yet in spite of this glaring fact, the 16 UPL teams constitute 50 per cent of the Fufa 32-member body.  Last week, the majority UPL club owners declared they had had enough of Fufa’s overbearing contro and manipulation. They sought to seek a higher office to release them from the shackles.  I am greatly impressed that Bernard Atiku and Mwine Mpaka, the chairmen of Onduparaka FC and Mbarara City FC respectively, woke up and led nine other teams to challenge Fufa’s slave tendencies by petitioning the minister

Kirunda demise reveals FUFA's purge on ex-internationals.

IMMANUEL BEN MISAGGA The date May 25 should be enshrined in Ugandan football history for two major contrasts.  That morning, as the top Fufa leadership met in Mengo to share its weekly sitting allowances [loot] from Fifa’s $500,000 Covid-19 emergency fund and also forge a way to handle the backlash from the abrupt stoppage of the 2019/2020 football season, Jimmy Kirunda, the greatest leader in Ugandan football history, was walking the streets of Bwaise when he collapsed and died. What makes the two events intertwined is the fact that on one hand, Kirunda dedicated his entire life to the success of Ugandan football but when Moses Magogo, the discredited, took over the Fufa leadership in 2013, he immediately sacked him from the role of adviser. Magogo instead preferred to assemble a team of people who have never sacrificed anything tangible in Ugandan football. That was the start of the end of Kirunda, who had to endure the last days of his life physically, mentally, and financially hand