~By Male Solomon Grace
I have been reflecting on the conversation today involving the CDF General Muhoozi Kainerugaba about National communications. It brings to the surface a deeper issue Uganda must address—how government communicates.
The reality is that: Uganda still operates with multiple “centres of voice”—Ministries, security agencies, and political leaders—all communicating simultaneously. This creates overlaps, contradictions, and at times confusion—even within government itself.
If we are serious about nation-building, then communication must be treated as infrastructure—not an afterthought. The role of a government spokesperson should be clear: To harmonise, verify, and project ONE coherent national position—fed by all MDAs.
Security agencies like the army and police must communicate operational updates, yes—but within a broader, coordinated national narrative. What we have been seeing is a signal that the system still needs alignment.
Uganda has a powerful story—of resilience, growth, and ambition. We don’t need more voices because fragmented voice weakens our story. We just need ONE clear voice, supported by many institutions.
If we get this right—structured, disciplined, and strategic communication—Uganda won’t just speak louder. It will speak with clarity, credibility, and influence.
I want to re-echo my motivation that this is not about individuals. It is about systems and systems must work—especially when the nation is speaking.
