EC gave Museveni zero at stations where he polled 252 votes

President Museveni holds a shield and a spear given to him as a sign of power during presidential campaigns in Luweero District recently. PHOTO/ FILE

What you need to know:

  • When given names of these polling stations, Ms Phibby Otaala, the NRM Tororo vice chairperson said: “I think that is total madness. How do you expect him (Museveni) not to get anything at St. Kizito when that is his stronghold?  That one cannot be true. Those are fabrications.”    

The Electoral Commission results from the Presidential Election held on January 14, show that President Yoweri Museveni scored zero at two polling stations in Tororo District. 

The stations include St. Kizito Primary School (N-Z) situated in Amagoro B Ward Tororo Municipality and Nyambulie situated in Senda Parish, West Budama North East Constituency.   
But according to interviews conducted with more than a dozen people from the two villages, Mr Museveni, 76, did not score zero in the area; he garnered 100 votes at St. Kizito Primary School (N-Z) and 152 votes at Nyambulie, giving him a total of 252 votes.  Still, the majority of the votes here went to the National Unity Platform (NUP) candidate, Mr Robert Ssentamu Kyagulanyi.  
Mr Shaban Muganja, the LCI and NRM chairman of the village where St. Kizito Primary School is located said although Mr Kyagulanyi defeated Mr Museveni who has been in power since 1986 at this polling station, the elderly in the area voted for Mr Museveni, and there is no polling station in Tororo where Museveni “performed badly to the extent of getting zero.”    
“That is rigging,” he said.

“That is very bad and it’s a crime.”

He said the declaration form signed by agents of all presidential candidates are clear, showing that Mr Kyagulanyi defeated Mr Museveni with a difference of eight votes.  
"Now that's rigging. I'm the chairman of NRM this village. I know Mzee (Museveni) performed very well within the municipality and generally Tororo District. There's no polling station where Mzee performed poorly to an extent of getting a zero. When the results came out at the end of elections Mzee got 100 while Kyagulanyi got 108. The declaration form was very clear and both Museveni's and Kyaulanyi's agents signed on it,” Mr Muganja said.

 Mr Clement Othieno, a resident who says he voted for Mr Museveni at St Kizito Primary School polling station says, the votes were rigged if Electoral Commission says the president got zero at that polling station.

“That's not true. I voted from N-Z. President Museveni never got zero. I think someone changed results. Even at A-N, he got many votes. I think the Electoral Commission is not being fair when they say he got zero. I think they changed the results.

Ms Cissy Namutebi, another resident who also voted for Mr Museveni says she feels “bad when they say Mzee Museveni got zero” at this polling station.    

“Mzee Museveni got 100 because that's where I voted from. I gave my vote to Mzee Museveni and I will continue giving him for as long as he contests. I cannot give Kyagulanyi my vote because I'm a mature person and we know how Uganda is. Mzee said he will secure our future. I feel bad when I hear people say he got zero. That's a big lie," she said.
A presiding officer of St Kizito Primary School polling station, Mr Davis Okach said Mr Museveni got 100 votes but slightly contradicts what others say was Kyagulanyi’s score. While he says Mr Kyagulanyi scored 109 votes, the other residents that we interviewed say he got 108 votes.
“If the Election Commission tally sheet read that the president got zero, he says it could be “an error.”

Mr Kyagulanyi’s votes—108—are accurately captured in Electoral Commission tally sheets. Okacha claims that on the polling day, he realized that he had been given junior polling assistants who didn’t know anything. He says he ended up doing most of the work at the polling station.    
"As far as I'm concerned, President Museveni got 100 votes. Kyagulanyi who won at the polling station got 109 votes. If it (DR form) is reading zero then it was an error that was recorded. That very day when we worked we were understaffed and the people I was given to work with had started recording different things and when I noticed this, I decided to take over and personally started recording. Probably the declaration form that was taken I didn't take note of it. But in others, I rectified," said Mr Okacha said.

Shocked by Museveni’s scores, when the URN reporter visited Nyambulie village—where the second polling station is located, the LCI vice-chairperson Ochieng Oculu, who was having lunch, jumped off the table in shock.

“I personally voted him,” he said.   
Kyagulanyi’s agent at Nyambulie, Justine Achieng, said she was at the polling station when counting of votes ended and she recorded “Kyagulanyi scoring 183 votes and Museveni getting 152 votes.”

Kyagulanyi’s votes—183—are accurately captured in EC result sheets.   
Mr Joshua Opio, a polling assistant at Nyabulie polling station also said Mr Kyagulanyi emerged the victor at this particular polling station with 183 votes and Mr Museveni got 152 votes.

Mr Opio argued that anything that shows Mr Museveni with zero scores is not the “true outcome of their polling station.”    
Mr Museveni has in the past complained that NRM is sometimes rigged. But he has never explained at what election level is NRM rigged and the extent of rigging or availed evidence.  

The fact that the president’s votes at a polling station aren’t reflected in the tally sheet and NRM which usually has eyes at every polling station and tally centre failed to detect the anomaly, it is telling that the party’s vote protection team—unveiled weeks before the election—failed to protect Museveni’s votes at all polling stations across the country. 

“I am not informed about that, I would have let you know,” Ms Phibby Otaala, the NRM Tororo vice chairperson said when asked if the president scored zero at any polling station in the district.  

When given names of these polling stations, Ms Otaala said: “I think that is total madness. How do you expect him (Museveni) not to get anything at St. Kizito when that is his stronghold?  That one cannot be true. Those are fabrications.”    

And when asked why the NRM leadership in Tororo failed to protect the president’s votes, she evaded the question, arguing that it’s the duty of the Electoral Commission Returning Officer to announce the truth.

“If you have evidence that the president got 100 votes and they gave him zero, I think that Electoral Commission Presiding Officer and all those who were responsible should be reprimanded,”    she said.

Ms Otaala questioned: “How do you bring in the NRM leadership of Tororo to go to the tally centre, or polling station and tell the presiding officer to enter true results. Is it how it should be?”    

She said this is a “big story” because no single radio station in Tororo has broadcasted such news.

Ms Otaala hastened to advise URN reporters to leave “Tororo out of confusion.”

“This kind of confusion, she claimed, has been happening only in Buganda.”

Electoral Commission Spokesperson, Mr Paul Bukenya said he needed time to crosscheck documents from the area before commenting on the matter. All staff who could help with verification, he said were busy organizing Wednesday election. He promised a response on Thursday.

When contacted back on Thursday, he said he was busy with other office assignments and couldn’t give a definite day when he can crosscheck documents to give a comment.  

URN also reached out to NRM Director of Communication, Emmanuel Dombo who kept promising that he would check if the president got zero at any polling station in Tororo.