Ugandaโs military chief shuts Daily Monitor and NTV Uganda
Ugandaโs military chief shut down the Daily Monitor and NTV Uganda, threatening all critical media with closure unless personally approved. The move, echoing past censorship, risks silencing independe
Ugandaโs military chief, General Muhoozi Kainerugaba, has ordered the immediate shutdown of two major media outletsโthe Daily Monitor newspaper and NT
Read Full Story at Al Jazeera โWhy This Matters
The shutdown of Ugandaโs *Daily Monitor* and NTV Uganda signals a dangerous escalation in state-led censorship, where military authority now supersedes legal frameworks governing press freedom. This move not only undermines Ugandaโs already fragile democratic institutions but also sets a precedent for unchecked executive overreach, normalizing state violence against dissent.
Background Context
Ugandaโs media landscape has long been a battleground between independent journalism and authoritarian control, with crackdowns escalating during election periods or when scrutiny of the government intensifies. The militaryโs direct involvement in censorshipโhistorically delegated to civilian agenciesโreflects a broader consolidation of power under President Yoweri Museveni, now in his fourth decade of rule.
What Happens Next
Other critical outlets may preemptively self-censor to avoid shutdowns, accelerating the erosion of public discourse. Legal challenges from press freedom groups could stall the closures, but a compliant judiciary or legislative body may quash such efforts, leaving journalists and the public with fewer avenues for dissent.
Bigger Picture
Ugandaโs actions mirror a regional trend where military institutions, often unchecked by civilian oversight, wield disproportionate influence over governance. The crackdown underscores how democratic backsliding in Africa increasingly relies on formalizing repression through institutional mechanisms, making resistance harder to mobilize.

