Skip to main content
Parliament director Chris Obore

Obore Locked Out of Office as Parliament Defies Court to Send Him on Forced Leave

Subsequently, Obore’s lawyers have written to the Clerk to Parliament protesting the unlawful move to send their client on forced leave despite a pending court case over the same matter.
posted onSeptember 20, 2019
nocomment

By Max Patrick Ocaido

Parliament has defied court orders to send Chris Obore, Director, Communication and Public Affairs (CPA) on forced leave.

Obore recently secured a court injunction blocking parliament from sacking him on ground that his appointment as parliament director was illegal and done in contravention of the Parliamentary Service (Staff) Regulations, 2001.

This was in reaction to the systematic investigations by the Inspectorate of Government-IG into the recruitment and appointment of Obore.

However, on Wednesday, the Clerk to Parliament, Jane Kibirige hastily without any explanation wrote to Obore informing him to forcefully take his ‘accumulated leave’ with “immediate effect.”

The letter was copied to the Speaker of Parliament, Deputy Speaker, Deputy Clerks, Director Human Resource and Director Finance.

Indeed, when Obore reported to his Office on Friday morning, he found the door to his office locked only to be informed by his secretary that the door locker had been changed by the Sergeant-At-Arms.

According to the Public Service Standing Orders, once a public servant does not take his or her leave in a given financial year then his or her leave days are forfeited. It therefore remains unclear why Chris Obore is being sent on ‘accumulated leave’ which is not recognized by Ministry of Public Service.

According to the letter, Kibirige who has personally never taken leave since 2012 does not give any reason as to why she is sending Obore on “forced leave” which has been disguised as “accumulated leave.”

The Public Service Standing Orders further stipulates that in the event that a public officer is sent on forced leave or interdicted or temporally removed from office then the he or she shall be informed of the reasons for such an interdiction.

Subsequently, Obore’s lawyers have written to the Clerk to Parliament protesting the unlawful move to send their client on forced leave despite a pending court case over the same matter.

Obore’s woes come hardly a month after IGG Irene Mulyagonja found 7 parliamentary staff including a director guilty of corruption. The IGG in her letter dated August 08 implicated Emmanuel Bakwega, Director of Clerks, Parliament and Paul Wabwire, Deputy Clerk Parliamentary Affairs for fraudulently receiving Shs100m as facilitation for a training in Kigali and UK between December 2015 and June 2016, but did not attend the trainings.

In a similar investigation, the IGG has also implicated Julian Kaganzi, Chief Procurement Officer, Patrick Lassu, Senior Procurement Officer, Abdu Kasule Kagimu, Public Affairs Officer, Sam Bosio, Assistant Inventory Management Officer and Barbara Nabitaka, Public Affairs Officer, over an irregular procurement of a camera at Shs148m and camera stand at Shs3.4m in June 2015.

About Author

Kp Reporter - Chief editor

Join the conversation

Restricted HTML

  • Allowed HTML tags: <a href hreflang> <em> <strong> <cite> <blockquote cite> <code> <ul type> <ol start type> <li> <dl> <dt> <dd> <h2 id> <h3 id> <h4 id> <h5 id> <h6 id>
  • Lines and paragraphs break automatically.
  • Web page addresses and email addresses turn into links automatically.