Government has not dropped the idea of carrying out an inquest into the death of former Butaleja district woman representative, Cerinah Nebanda, despite the arrest and conviction of a key suspect in her death seven years ago.
The Deputy Attorney General, Mwesigwa Rukutana, told Parliament that the inquest was hampered by the Director of Public Prosecutions (DPP), who held onto all the required files during the prosecution.
MP Nebanda, 24, who was serving her first term in the House, died at Mukwaya General Hospital, where she was rushed on the evening of 14 December 2012. Police later attributed the legislator’s death to drug consumption.
MPs and the public demanded that foreign intelligence investigators be called in to probe the death. Police arrested the legislator’s acquaintance, Adam Kalungi, who was charged and convicted of manslaughter in January 2014.
During the Tuesday sitting, Rukutana said that the Chief Justice had appointed Justice Paul Mugamba as the coroner to head the inquest into the death of the MP.
“There are still some procedural technicalities and hence the inquest is yet to start. There was demand to prosecute the suspects and the DPP rushed to court,” said Rukutana.
Rukutana was responding to an issue raised by Jinja East MP, Paul Mwiru, who wondered why government was delaying to release the report of investigations into the MPs’ death.
“Everything the coroner would have used was used by the DPP in court. The coroner found it very difficult to proceed,” Rukutana added.
A coroner is an official appointed by government to investigate into a violent, sudden and suspicious death.
The Attorney General said that the time allocated to the inquest expired as prosecution took time in court.
“The request for the inquest was not reinstated. We are now examining the possibility of reconstituting the inquest afresh,” he said adding that “When this happens we shall inform the House.”
Hon. Mwiru suggested that government be given timelines within which to report about the issue considering that it had not been handled for a long time.
Lwemiyaga MP Theodore Ssekikubo said government should restart the process as the court procedure ended years ago.
Busiro East’s Medard Lubega was of the view that the inquest remained necessary even with the court conviction since there was suspicion in the MPs death.
“The proper killers can still be got. The inquest is still important even with the conviction since the convict admitted to being a drug addict,” he said.
He added that a decision should have been taken already following the completion of the court process.
Speaker Rebecca Kadaga gave the Attorney General two weeks to present to Parliament an update on the matter.
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