Did You Know Your Past IGPs & How Police Has Evolved Over Time? Take A Tour With Us

Did You Know Your Past IGPs & How Police Has Evolved Over Time? Take A Tour With Us

By Andrew Irumba

Kampala: Before bringing you to the list of Inspector Generals of the Uganda Protectorate Police and Uganda Police Force, allow us first inform you that before the creation of Police in Uganda, there was a traditional method of dispute resolution through kingdoms including; Buganda, Ankole, Bunyoro-Kitara and Toro.

There were also other organized areas like Busoga, Bugisu, Teso, Acholi and Lango, all of which had cultural norms and systems of social control. Every tribal community had its own social policing method based on customary rules and obligations.

The kings and elders policed the wide communities; the elders policed villages while men policed their families. The elderly in general were responsible for enforcing discipline among the youth.

The Uganda Police Force was established in 1906 by the British administration. At that time, it was referred to as the Uganda Armed Constabulary with the primary responsibility of quelling “riots and unrest.”

Birth Of Police

When Uganda became a British protectorate in 1894, a judicial system based on the British common law was imposed with the backing of an armed police force.

Hence, the Uganda Police Force was first established as Uganda armed constabulary in 1899 with the main aim of maintaining public order. The recruitment procedures, organisation and training were based on the Royal Irish Constabulary mode of armed policing.

Recruitment was based on the basis of physical fitness and aggressive tendencies. Preferred qualities were people aged 17-25 years, height (not below 5 feet 6 inches) and chest size (not less than 33 inches). Bravery and courage in the police work were judged according to the extent to which local resistance was suppressed, with little regard to force used in suppressing the resistance.

In 1906, the Uganda Armed Constabulary was renamed the Protectorate Police Force. The Protectorate Police was created on May 25, 1906, by the British government.

Uganda Protectorate Police was created in response to crime and administrative requirements of the colonial government. The force was also created to suppress rebellion against the colonial government policies.

The enactment in 1903 of the Uganda armed constabulary and the Uganda prisons ordinances established a civil police force and prison service, although the officer commanding troops remained responsible for the unit until 1906.

In 1905, control of affairs of the Uganda protectorate was passed on from the hands of the foreign office to that of the colonial office. In 1906 a completely separate department came into existence, responsible for the Uganda police a civil armed force.

On 25 May 1906, captain WFS Edwards DSO (later Brigadier General ) arrived in Uganda to take up the post of Inspector General of the Uganda protectorate police and that was the birth of the country’s modern police.

Edward set about organizing the police and by the end of 1908, the force, which was headquartered at Entebbe, had a clear system of administration, records, files and statistics and the year saw the introduction of the best system.

The police force initially included the capacity of one officer, seven inspectors, one effendi, 118 non-commissioned officers and 848 police constables. Most of these were British, apart from the police constables who were largely Africans. By 1912, there were 15 police stations that each included a criminal investigations department (CID), signals unit, traffic unit and railway unit.

Following reorganization in 1907, the Uganda police 1,046 Africans ranking from Sgt majors (10) sergeants (36), corporals (40) detectives (3), first-class constables (14), second class constables (98) and third-class constables (813), one clerk, one Armourer and three interpreters.

At the end of 1961 and the beginning of 1962, the first expatriate officers were permitted to leave the force, providing an opportunity for promotion and deployment of local officers to senior positions.

The end of the second war in 1945 and the establishment of the United Nations Organization (UNO) in the same year created a new world order in which self-determination, especially on the African continent, became imperative.

The 1960s effectively became the decade of African independence. As October 9, 1962, Independence Day drew near for Uganda, the country’s first African inspector general of police designate, Erinayo Wilson Oryema, had an ominous vision of things to come, which he shared with his officers.

Between 1930 and 1940, there were increased political pressures and rebellions against colonialism. Thus, the Police were involved in suppressing strikes, tax evasion, riots and rebellions in areas of Acholi, Kigezi, Buganda and Bugisu. The political agitations in the wake of the formation of political parties and agitations for independence created more problems for the Uganda Police.

Despite its weaknesses, most studies say that at the time of independence, Uganda had a small, effective and well-motivated police force. Operational standards were high, police officers were also proud of serving in and being identified with the force, and the public appreciated their services.

In the early 1980s, there was the recruitment of university graduates into the force. Most of these were trained in Munduli, Tanzania. There was also a “screening of deadwood”, dictated by the International Monetary Fund (IMF).

President Milton Obote’s second administration also started the National Security Agency (NASA), which took on the role of criminal investigation and in the process, sidelined the regular police.

During President Yoweri Museveni’s NRA bush war, many police stations were attacked and many officers killed. In 1986 when NRM took power, there was another screening that reduced the number of police officers from about 10,000 to 3,000.

The Special Forces, which had been loyal to Obote’s UPC government, was disbanded and replaced by the Mobile Police Patrol Unit. There was also more recruitment of university graduates as constables, which saw about 300 graduates join the force, reducing the number of semi-illiterate officers.

Thus, the mode of recruitment ceased to be about just physical fitness but included consideration of intellectual abilities.

Now, Below Are IGPs That Have Served Police Since 1930s

1.J.M.Okoth Ochola (2018 to date)

2.Maj Gen Kale Kayihura (2005 to 2018)

3.Lt Gen Katumba Wamala (2001 to 2005)

4.John Kisembo (1999-2001)

5.John Cossy Odomel (1992-1999)

6.Apollo Byekwaso (1990-1992)

7.David Psomgen (1988-1990)

8. Okoth Ogola (1981-1985)

9.W.B Musoke (Jan 1980-May 1980)

10.David Barlow (1979-80)

11.Gabriel Odria (1977-1979)

12.Kasim Obura (1976-1979)

13.Benjamin Othieno, (1971-1974)

14.Luke Ofungi – He served as police chief in three different regimes. He first served as IGP from 1973 -1974. He was IGP again from May 1980-December 1980; May 1985-1986 and 1986 to 1989

15.Wilson Erinayo Oryema (1964-1971)

16.Michael J. Macoun (1959-1964)

17.H M King (1934-1940).

Below are some notable people who have served in the Uganda Police Force;

  1. Joshua Cheptegei – Olympian long-distance runner
  2. Luke Kercan Ofungi – Long-serving former IGP
  3. General Edward Katumba Wamala – First Ugandan military officer to serve as Inspector General.

 

Past IGPs In Pictorial

The mandate of the Uganda Police Force as provided in the Constitution of the Republic of Uganda, and Uganda Police Force Act Cap 303, is the protection of life and property, prevention and detection of crime, keeping law and order, and maintenance of overall Security and Public Safety in Uganda.
By the end of this article, we’re sure you’ve learnt a thing or two….
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