Ugandan Karamoja Affairs minister Mary Goretti Kitutu, 61, arrives at the anti-corruption court where she was charged with corruption and conspiracy to commit felony when she diverted 9,000 pre-printed iron sheets meant for the Karamoja Community Empowerment Program, in Kololo, Kampala, Uganda April 6, 2023.  REUTERS/Abubaker Lubowa
Uganda

Ugandan minister charged with corruption over diversion of aid

A Ugandan court charged a minister with several corruption offenses connected to accusations of diverting metal roofing sheets meant to help residents in the restive northeastern Karamoja region.

By Elias Biryabarema

KAMPALA (Reuters) -A Ugandan court charged a minister on Thursday with several corruption offences connected to accusations of diverting metal roofing sheets meant to help residents in the restive northeastern Karamoja region, court documents showed.

Ugandan Karamoja Affairs minister Mary Goretti Kitutu sits in the dock at the anti-corruption court where she was charged with corruption and conspiracy to commit felony when she diverted 9,000 pre-printed iron sheets meant for the Karamoja Community Empowerment Program, in Kololo, Kampala, Uganda April 6, 2023.

Prosecution of ministers for corruption is rare in Uganda, where stealing and the misuse of public funds and materials is routine.

Karamoja, in a remote region bordering Kenya and South Sudan, is home to pastoral nomads vulnerable to frequent droughts and deadly cattle raids.

Ugandan Karamoja Affairs minister Mary Goretti Kitutu and her brother Micheal Naboya Kitutu sit in the dock at the anti-corruption court where she was charged with corruption and conspiracy to commit felony when she diverted 9,000 pre-printed iron sheets meant for the Karamoja Community Empowerment Program, in Kololo, Kampala, Uganda April 6, 2023.

Karamoja Affairs Minister Mary Goretti Kitutu was charged with several offences including "loss of public property" and "conspiracy to defraud," Kampala Anti-Corruption Court papers seen by Reuters showed.

The charge sheet said Kitutu diverted 14,500 roofing iron sheets "to her own benefit and to the benefit of third parties."

She pleaded not guilty to all the charges, the papers showed. After she was charged, Kitutu was remanded in custody and ordered to reappear in court on April 12.

Kitutu could not be reached for immediate comment.

Police arrested three close relatives of Kitutu in February for selling metal roofing sheets branded with "Office of the Prime Minister," the government-owned New Vision newspaper reported.

The Office of the Director of Public Prosecutions (ODPP) said late on Wednesday it would charge Kitutu with corruption and conspiracy to commit a felony.

Appearing before a parliamentary committee last month, she asked for forgiveness for the mismanagement of the distribution of metal roofing sheets.

(Reporting by Elias Biryabarema; editing by Hereward Holland, George Obulutsa, Jason Neely and Richard Chang)

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