President Yoweri Kaguta Museveni has proposed a breakthrough compromise to end the decades-old conflict between the Japadhola and Iteso communities in Tororo.

Speaking during a meeting held today at State House, Entebbe, the President suggested that Tororo Municipality be elevated to a city status and maintained as a neutral administrative unit, with the establishment of three new districts to accommodate both sides.
The meeting, which was also attended by the Vice President H.E. Jessica Alupo, brought together leaders from the two ethnic groups who have long disputed the control and status of Tororo Town.
“We have agreed on the principle, Tororo becomes a neutral city, and we create three new districts, one called Mukuju, another Mulanda, and a third one whose name should be neutral. Some people want to call it Tororo, but we are saying no, go and get a neutral name,” President Museveni said.
The President advised both groups to engage in peaceful and private discussions regarding the naming of the third district.
“You don’t have to fight. Discuss among yourselves quietly. But it’s not correct to say you’re going to die over a name,” he emphasized.
As part of the proposed arrangement, the Iteso community would retain Mukuju, which is considered an uncontested area, and also benefit from the neutral Tororo City.
On the other hand, the Japadhola community would receive two new districts, including Mulanda and the third district, whose name is yet to be agreed upon.
President Museveni noted that this proposed structure would create fairness and restore balance.
“The compromise should be that the Badama get two new districts, and the Bateso get one district and a city. Just like in Mbale where there is both Mbale District and Mbale City, Tororo can also have a district and a neutral city,” he said.
He also criticized the prolonged ethnic contests which have stalled development in the region.
“You people are really wasting time for your people. What’s crucial is bringing services nearer to the people. That’s the reason we broke up larger districts like Bukedi, which once covered Pallisa and Busia, to create smaller, more accessible units,” the President said.
Quoting the scripture and drawing from his personal experiences, the President warned against divisive politics rooted in land ownership and ethnicity.
“I was a Mulokole myself until 1965. We used to say: ‘They left undone what they ought to have done, and they did what they ought not to have done, and there is no truth in them.’ That is what you have been doing,” he said.
“You remember the herdsmen of Ibrahim in the Bible who quarrelled over land. Ibrahim said if you go east, I’ll go west; and if you go west, I’ll go east. That is the wisdom we need today.”
President Museveni urged both sides to move beyond historical divisions and focus on the bigger picture.
“Even if you had said the whole of Tororo Town goes to the Bateso, so what? What matters is service, not ownership,” he stated.
“When we came to government, some people tried to raise old colonial boundary politics like parts of Rakai being in Buganda, but I said leave it. I’m not interested in those distractions,” he added.
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