
Uganda Minister for labour and employment Charles Okello
Uganda’s State Minister for Labour, Employment and Industrial Relations, Col (rtd) Charles Okello Engola, was shot dead Tuesday morning at his home in a Kampala suburb.
In Summary
- The Minister for Labour Charles Okello was shot dead at his home in Kampala by his bodyguard.
- The assassinator Mr. Wilson Sabiiti claimed to be owed money by the late minister
- Bodyguard later shot himself after committing the crime.
The minister’s personal assistant Ronald Otim also sustained severe injuries and was rushed to Mulago hospital for treatment.
“The minister was shot at his residence in Kyanja by one of his bodyguards who allegedly fired several shots at close range. He fled from the scene up to the trading centre at Kyanja, Ring Road where he entered a salon and also shot himself dead,” police spokesperson, Fred Enanga told journalists in Kampala.
The assassinator was later identified as Wilson Sabiiti.
The crime scene was cordoned off by security personnel as police launched investigations into the incident.
The Deputy Inspector General of Police, Maj Gen Geoffrey Tumusiime Katsigazi and the Director of Criminal Investigation Department, Maj Tom Magambo were the first security chiefs to arrive at the minister’s home.
Earlier, an eyewitness had claimed that the bodyguard complained that the slain minister owed him several months of unpaid salary as he shot in the air to warn civilians at Kyanja town, moments before turning the gun at himself.
“The guard said he hadn’t been paid Ush4 million. He said he had a pregnant woman and his children were not going to school yet the minister’s children were schooling,” the eyewitness said.
But, Gender and Labour minister Betty Amongi, who was among the first government officials who arrived at Engola’s home after the shooting, told journalists that Sabiiti “was a new bodyguard.”
“He has been working as his bodyguard for a month. He came from Bombo and joined other security guards assigned to the minister from the Ministry of Gender and Labour,” Ms Amongi said.
Police spokesperson, Mr Enanga, said it was too early to confirm the motive of the shooting.
“The investigation is currently in the early stages of review…We don’t want to speculate into the motive of the shooting until we have confirmed,” the police spokesman said.
The minister was on his way to attend a cabinet meeting when he was shot, according to Minister of ICT and national guidance, Chris Baryomunsi.
Uganda Police have launched investigations to unearth what might have led to the shotting of government official.