12 May 2026 will sit in books.
Yoweri Kaguta Museveni swore in. Again. 7th term. 40 years since 1986.
But, this swearing-in was different. Not because of big stage. Not because of army parade.
Because of who was missing.
First Lady Janet Kataaha Museveni was not there.
For first time ever, Mama Janet didn’t stand next to Mzee as he took oath.
Instead, First Daughter Natasha Museveni Karugire walked with him. Held program. Smiled for cameras.
And , Kampala is talking.
The Empty Chair That Spoke Loudest
Official word? Quiet. State House said nothing.
But whispers in town for weeks: “Mama Janet not well.” “She’s been sick, resting.”
Ugandans love Mama Janet. Prayer warrior. Minister. Mother of nation. When she misses this day — day she’s never missed since 1986 — people notice.
Kololo chairs were full. Presidents from Tanzania — Samia Suluhu Hassan, Somalia — Hassan Sheikh Mohamud, DRC — Félix Tshisekedi, Burundi — Évariste Ndayishimiye, plus South Sudan’s Salva Kiir, Kenya’s William Ruto. Big crowd.
But one chair empty. And it became headline.
Natasha stepped up. Calm. Presidential. Daughter becoming pillar.
CDF Son Stands, Nation Reads Meaning
General Muhoozi Kainerugaba was there. Chief of Defence Forces. Full uniform. Saluting father.
Picture is powerful.
Father swearing in at 82. Son as army chief at 52. Daughter as escort.
Opposition will call it “dynasty signs”. NRM will call it “family service”.
But ordinary Ugandan at home watching UBC sees: “This family is tight. This transition is planned.”
Whether you like it or not, symbolism is heavy.
Why Mama Janet’s Absence Hit Ugandans Different
First, she’s not just wife. She’s partner.
Luwero bush. HIV fight. Education Ministry. Karamoja. She’s been in every photo, every hard time.
Second, Ugandans fear unknown. When big person misses big event, rumors fly. “Is she okay?” “Why no statement?”
Silence breeds talk. And talk was everywhere from Owino to Mbarara taxi park.
Third, it humanized Mzee.
For once, he looked alone without her. Even with Natasha there. Even with Muhoozi saluting.
Man is 82. Not in suit this time. Wife sick. You saw it in his face when he glanced right and chair was not Mama.
The Swearing-In Itself: What Mzee Said vs What People Heard
Economic development was today’s emphasis from the start to the end of his speech.
Museveni, “This Kisanja (term) should be regarded as a kisanja of no sleep for all Ugandans”
His speech was same tune: “Peace, wealth creation, PDM, oil, East Africa, fight corruption.”
He thanked Tanzanians for pipeline and liberation effects with Nyerere’s assistance. Praised Mozambique for the strong liberation efforts. Told DRC “we are brothers”. And hopes of a more strong East African Community.
But, crowds were watching body language.
Samia Suluhu followed as she’s read his written speak. Tshisekedi nodded deep when Mzee mentioned “African problems, African solutions”.
Ruto wasn’t presented this time round as Kenya representative but Former President Uhuru Kenyatta was present, but eyes were calculating. Jubilations were heard as Uhuru was being introduced.
This wasn’t just Uganda day. It was Great Lakes day.
Elite Uganda Analysis: 3 Things This Day Told Us
Succession Talk Is Now Open
Mama Janet absent. Muhoozi in CDF uniform. Natasha public role.
First Family is showing options. Not naming. But showing.
“If anything happens, we are ready,” is message.
Regional Legitimacy Still Strong
Suluhu, Tshisekedi, Ndayishimiye, Hassan Sheikh — they came.
Despite noise from Europe, despite Opposition boycott, Africa showed up.
2026-2031 Will Be About Final Projects
Mzee knows age. Speech mentioned “oil final push”, “EAC Federation steps”, “corruption fight real this time”.
Ordinary Uganda: What Mama on Taxi Said
I sat in taxi from City Square to Nakawa. Radio on. Swearing-in live.
Mama next to me: “Banange, Mama Janet taliiwo?” Janet not present
Conductor: “Bamugamba alwadde.” That she’s sick.
Mama: “Kai, katonda amuwonye. That woman prays for us.”
No politics. Just care.
Then young man back seat: “But why Natasha? Why not Muhoozi wife?”
Another: “Blood is thicker, bro.”
Ssebo, that’s Uganda. We mix politics with family with prayer.
Last Word: 7th Term Starts With Question Mark and Prayer
History will write: “12 May 2026 — Museveni sworn in, First Lady absent.”
Some will say “weakness”.
Others will say “human”.
But all will agree: Uganda turned page.
With Mama Janet recovering — and nation praying she does — with Natasha stepping forward, with Muhoozi holding army, with African presidents watching…
Mzee starts last lap.
Not with shouts.
With whispers.
With questions.
With family.
And ssebo, in Uganda, family is everything.
So we say: “Get well soon, Maama.”
And to Mzee: “The pearl is watching, 7th time.”
That’s all.
