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Pastor laughs at those crying over free food

Estranged Pastor Aloysius Bugingo says people who are crying over free food are …….

Estranged Pastor Aloysius Bugingo never stops fights over limelight. His recent utterance puts him on the battle front of tribal wars in Uganda.

Bugingo says what Ugandans are today going through should be a lesson to all of us, especially the people from central.

‘My sermons are always punctuated by the word save. I am on record, for always urging people to save. Now see! Because there is no saving culture here, people are today calling upon the government and well-wishers to give them very easy to get things like food,” the estranged pastor noted.

He continues, “People in Buganda, we should wake up. This has been a great lesson to us. We show off a lot. When a youth in Buganda gets money, he wants to show whoever is around, especially women, that he is loaded. Do research. You will discover that almost those who move around showing off, brandishing money, giving it to whoever looks on asking for it, are young men from here, in Buganda.” 

Pastor Aloysius Bugingo

Without hiding his sentiments, he soliloquized, ” a westerner cannot do that. These people are always shabby and poor-looking but go back to their origins. They have built mansions. They have gathered riches that you can never give to them, judging by the way they dress or behave. The people starving and asking for food are from Wakiso and Mukono districts in Buganda.”

Bugingo asserted that you find this business of begging for food in Buganda and Busoga only, and in some parts in the northern Uganda.

Referring to himself as a Muganda, Bugingo said, “We prefer showing off to working. This must stop! People in western Uganda work. Almost all the food that feeds us in Buganda comes from there, unlike in the past years. They don’t need government food. It is we Baganda who sold land, for farming, and bought boda bodas.”

“Who will be hurt most by Covid-19 effects?’ he queried.  “We must learn to save both food and money. Masaka used to be Uganda’s food basket. What happened? Let’s stop showing off and work, people from Buganda  let us wake up Covid-19 has taught us, a big lesson,” the estranged pastor advised.