Woman Found Dead in River After Selling House to Museveni’s Minister
Verida Kajungu Degeya formerly a resident of Lubaga Division in Kampala was in September found dead in River Mpanga in Fort Portal City. This happened about two months allegedly after selling her land measuring 0.25 acres with four houses at 650 million Shillings to the Minister for the Presidency, Milly Babirye Babalanda.
In a longwinded case that goes back one year ago, Babalanda purchased a family home at 650 million Shillings in a deal that has now been labeled as dubious and illegal. The land in question was registered in the name of Verida Kajungu Degeya, a widow to Fredrik Degeya and her only daughter Florence Namubiru.
It is alleged that Kajungu approached a money lender William Kigongo for a quick loan of 170 million Shillings, which she was meant to pay back in three months. But the loan agreement which was signed on July 15, 2021, indicated that she had received and had to pay back 300 million Shillings in three months without fail.
However, two days earlier, the three; Namubiru, Kajungu, and William Kigongo had signed a sale agreement indicating that the former had sold the land to the latter. The said land is registered as Plot 336, Kibuga Volume 1530 Folio 14 Block 16.
This raises the question of how one can sell land and again use the same land as collateral security to get a loan two days later from the same person. But because Kigongo was never a registered money lender, he had no locus demanding collateral security for the loan.
“That’s why he had to disguise that the land had been sold to him. But clearly, there was never a sale. Because you can’t enter into a loan agreement on a property that is already sold,” Stanley Okecho, Namubiru’s lawyer said in an interview with Uganda Radio Network.
Surprisingly, before even three months elapsed, Kigongo transferred the title into his name on August 19, 2021. But Namubiru told URN that her and her mother’s signatures were forged to effect the transfer.
“The only agreement that I have ever appended my signature on is the one he was giving money. If my signature is on any other document, either it was forged or I was tricked into signing it. But knowingly I never signed on any transfer forms,” Namubiru said.
Kajungu moved to lodge a caveat on the land to stop Kigongo from selling it to a third party. In an affidavit she swore in support of the caveat, through Bbaale & Partners Advocates & Legal Consultants, Kajungu stated her relationship with Kigongo was that of a money lender and… nothing less.
“While I was in some financial need I, together with my said daughter obtained a loan facility of 170 million Shillings from Kigongo William and surrendered to him the certificate of title of the said land as security… I have discovered that Kigongo William transferred the land into his name and now he claims that he purchased the said land and the property thereon which is not true.”
Kajungu’s statutory obligation written on April 22, 2022, further stated that Kigongo had started taking prospective buyers on the said land with the intention of having it sold to third parties,” the caveat was granted on April 27, 2022.
In the interview, Namubiru who admits to signing the loan agreement said the terms of the loan were predatory. “How can someone give you money and in three months that money is doubled? But I had less power to stop my mother from taking the loan because she said she had other loans from other people and she needed to clear them. I actually had wanted her to just sell the property instead of getting a loan from a money lender,” Namubiru said.
However, in an interview, Kigongo denied ever lending money to Kajungu and her daughter. Instead, he explained, he just outrightly bought the land and the four houses on it. But what he doesn’t explain is why the sale agreement signed between Kajungu, her daughter, and Babalanda on May 5, 2022, refers to him as a money lender. He also refuses to explain how the land ended up in his name less than three months after the signing of the loan agreement.
According to documents that URN has seen, the caveat that had been lodged by Kajungu was removed on July 11, 2022, following a May 5, 2022 agreement between Kajungu and Namubiru as the vendors, Kigongo William as the money lender, Dan Lwasa and Fred Lukyamuzi the Mailo Landowners on which the vendors had a lease and minister Milly Babalanda to whom the land was subsequently sold at 650 million Shillings. The Minister’s mortgage was financed by Housing Finance Bank Limited.
According to the agreement, the three parties shared the money among themselves with the Mailo land owners taking 200 million Shillings, 330 million Shillings taken by Kigongo, and then 120 million Shillings by the vendors.
The agreement also states that 100 million Shillings was to be given to the parties on the day it was signed and the balance after the processing and transfer of the land title into the names of Kajungu and Namubiru having as earlier seen, been transferred into the names of Kigongo.
But URN has also seen another agreement that amended the sales agreement with changes in the way the money should be shared. According to the agreement, which was signed on June 4, 2022, Kigongo retained his 330 million Shillings, 170 million Shillings went to the Mailo Landowners and 50 million Shillings went to Kajungu. It is not known whether, on the first 100 million Shillings that were paid, Kajungu took 70 million Shillings to make up for the 120 million Shillings that were for in the first agreement.
What’s more, the new agreement also indicated that 50 million Shillings would be paid in the bank account of Lawyer Sadat Bbaale. However, Namubiru insists that even when they were allegedly given 120 million Shillings, she never received even a coin despite the fact that she was a co-owner of the property.
In fact, according to documents, the only acknowledgment of receipt of money was the 55 million Shillings received by Kajungu on July 5, 2022. Namubiru also says throughout this transaction, she never saw the minister at their home to either talk to them or inspect the property she was purchasing.
But on May 27, 2022, Bbaale Sadat, Kajungu’s lawyer wrote to all the tenants demanding that they leave the houses in one month’s time to allow for vacant possession by the minister. This also meant that Kajungu and her daughter had to look elsewhere to stay. Namubiru says she was shocked to learn that her mother had not bought anywhere they would relocate to and that they had to go to her mother’s sister’s home in Gayaza.
“This was a shocker; I asked myself where my mother put the 120 million Shillings that was allegedly paid to her. How could she, at her age not have somewhere to go after selling a property, which was valued at over 1 billion Shillings?” Namubiru said.
While the questions abound, in early September 2022, Kajungu said she would check on her relations in Fort Portal and return to Gayaza after a couple of days. That was the last time they heard of her alive. The next they heard was that she had been found dead in river Mpanga.
A police post-mortem report dated September 22, 2022, indicates that the cause of death was unknown. But Namubiru believes that there is a connection between the land transaction in Lubaga and the death of her mother.
“…I’m not convinced that her death was innocent. I believe she was pushed. I looked everywhere in her things and I didn’t see anything that suggested that she had sold let alone received more than 100 million Shillings. I believe there was foul play in her death,” Namubiru says. Police in Kampala is currently investigating both the transaction and the mysterious death.
In an interview, Minister Babalanda said all the due diligence was done for her by her lawyers; Natala & Co. Advocates because of the nature of her job. She wondered how anybody can turn against her yet the transaction, according to her, was in the open. She said anybody who accuses her of wrongdoing risks being dragged to court for tarnishing her otherwise good name.
Namubiru is also very suspect of her mother’s lawyer Sadat Bbaale whom she says was in the middle of the controversy. “The same man who brought the money lender is the same man who instituted a caveat on the land and is the same man who brought the minister to buy the property. When the money was paid it was paid in his bank account yet we also have accounts. I have never seen even a coin of that so-called 100 million yet he knew that we co-owned the land,” Namubiru said.
But Bbaale declined to discuss the matter with URN instead he sent a short message saying if we want more information, the investigating officer of the police would be the right person to speak to. “They sold to the minister and she dully paid and they advanced her possession of the property what else do they want? They lodged a complaint with the police. I will avail you of the contact of the investigating officer I believe he will be of use to you. You will get all you need from him,” Bbaale’s message reads in part.
Now Namubiru’s lawyers have written to all the parties involved in the transaction demanding that they relinquish the property. In a letter dated October 28, 2022, written to Housing Finance Bank, Bbaale Sadat, Milly Babalanda, and William Kigongo, Namubiru says if they fail to fulfill the demands, she will have no option but to prefer both civil and criminal charges against the parties.
“The purpose of this communication is to demand as hereby do that you immediately do the following; cancel or cause the cancellation of all entries affecting our client’s leasehold interest and reinstate our client’s running lease, immediately handover the duplicate certificate of title of land…, Cancel or cause the cancellation of the illegal and fraudulent mortgage which affects our client’s leasehold interest, pay our client UGX 50million for the inconvenience and legal fees,” the letter reads in part.
But in response to Okecho’s letter, Housing Finance Bank through its head of legal affairs Anne Abeja, and the Chief Credit Officer, John Sitakange, all due diligence was done before the minister’s mortgage was granted.
“Be informed that your claims of any fraudulent dealings attributed to the bank with respect to the registration of the mortgage are absurd and untrue. Please note that in all mortgage transactions, the Bank conducts due diligence both on the property and in the Land Registry to confirm the registered proprietorship and whether are any encumbrances before proceeding to offer a loan facility to an applicant. Where an encumbrance is found, the Bank does not proceed with the transaction. As a result, the mortgage registration process is always in line with the stipulated laws, regulations, and procedures,” the letter reads in part.
In an interview, Okecho says the transaction is littered with irregularities that can’t stand a legal test. “You have someone lending money when he is not legally supposed to lend money, you have transfers that are dubious, and then you find a bank giving a mortgage without following proper procedures.
The mortgage is dated July 14, 2022, the transfer is dated July 21, 2022. You can’t give money to someone who got registered on July 27, 2022,” Okecho said adding, Namubiru’s case is not the only one where money lenders charge exceedingly exorbitant interest rates that make it almost impossible for the borrowers to pay back. This has led to an uncountable number of people losing property they mortgage as security.
Source: URN