Features

Gender Ministry brings Judith Babirye Back

By Drone Reporter
“Gender Ministry brings Gospel Singer Judith Babirye Back to Uganda and details why her second attempt on marriage failed.”
Legendary Gospel musician Judith Babirye living in Canada now, is destined to return after nursing gender based violence; the Gender Minister, Betty Among has confirmed.
“I personally talked to Judith Babirye who expressed her dilemma of gender based violence after being battered daily by her husband.  Babirye says she was forced to leave her marriage and the country to heal, but will return soon,” Among said.
Among was presiding over high level meeting on financing gender based violence prevention in Kampala. The meeting was attended by officials from government ministries, departments and agencies and local government leaders. Among urged local leaders to intensify monitoring and allocate resources to addressing gender based violence in their budgets and plans to mitigate the challenge.
Judith Babirye was married to Buikwe North legislator  Hon Ssebulime, but their marriage was short lived due to gender based violence. Court dissolved 17-months marriage between Members of Parliament (MPs) Judith Babirye and Paul Musoke Ssebulime on grounds of cruelty.
Justice Olive Mukwaya Kazaarwe of the High Court Family Division heard the divorce application filed by Buikwe North MP, Ssebulime against his partner Babirye, who was Buikwe District Woman MP. Ssebulime and Babirye were married under customary law in July 2018 in Kampala. Justice Kazaarwe ruled that Ssebulime gave detailed account of what he perceived as Babirye’s cruel actions towards him which caused him to suffer mental and psychological torture.
“It was the contention the respondent (Babirye) has acted in a manner that shows no respect to the petitioner. There was denial of conjugal rights, isolation of the petitioner from his social interactions with the community and the long unexplained absences without communication all served to cause the petitioner distress,” the court heard. Justice Kazaarwe ruled that the actions of Babirye’s refusal to cohabit with Ssebulime with some degree of permanence and her long unexplained absence were not a demonstration of commitment to the success of their marriage.
The court observed from the evidence provided that within a month of their marriage ceremony, Babirye had left the marital union with no explanation to Ssebulime.
“There was no time for ordinary wear and tear of marriage. However, the respondent withdrew her companionship from the petitioner not on one but on a number of occasions. When she left the last time, she did not call, text, email or communicate in any other available way.
The petitioner did not know of his wife’s whereabouts for seven months he waited before he filed this petition,” the judge held. Justice Kazaarwe noted that Babirye refused to participate in the proceedings and hence court did not have a benefit to hear her side.
Court heard that Ssebulime and Babirye lived together for two months, thereafter, the latter disappeared for two months and came back on December 1, 2018 before leaving again on December 22 to a place unknown to Ssebulime. Through his lawyers, Ssebulime told court that Babirye failed to differentiate between being married and being a celebrity.
According to Uganda Demographic and Health Survey (UDHS) 2016,56% of ever married women and 44% ever married men have experienced spousal violence whether physical, sexual or emotional. According to gender ministry policy brief, 18,872 people experienced domestic violence during lockdown.