Each of their respective sureties was required to execute a non-cash bond ranging from Shs 200 million to Shs 300 million. The accused were also ordered to deposit their land titles and passports with the court before being barred from accessing their respective offices. Additionally, Justice Gidudu directed the accused to report to the court registrar starting April 3, 2025.
Those granted bail include Lawrence Ssemakula, accountant general at the ministry of Finance; Jennifer Muhuruzi, acting director of treasury services and asset management; Paul Nkalubo Lumala, IT systems officer; Deborah Dorothy Kusiima, senior accountant in the treasury services department; Judith Ashaba, accountant; and Bettina Nayebare, research assistant.
Those denied bail and remanded include Mark Kasiiku, IT systems officer, and Tonny Yawe, senior IT officer. Justice Gidudu explained that Kasiiku is accused of using deception to secure unlawful gains and concealing a payment of $6.1 million fraudulently paid to a company in Japan.
Yawe, is accused of manipulating payment instruction files from the International Development Association in Washington. He allegedly diverted the payment meant for the intended recipient to Roadway Company Ltd in Poland, purporting it was for a recycling plant system and machinery, fully aware that this action would cause a loss to the government.
Twesigomwe is charged with being an accomplice in the corruption scheme, which prosecutors claim was aimed at illicitly enriching Roadway Company. The group faces 11 counts, including corruption, causing financial loss, electronic fraud, and money laundering.
Since then, the Criminal Investigations Directorate (CID), in collaboration with Defence Intelligence and Security (DIS), formerly known as Chieftaincy of Military Intelligence (CMI), has been interrogating various individuals from BoU, ministry of Finance, and the Accountant General’s office. The initial theory of a hacker being responsible for the heist was later disproven by CID’s Information and Communication Technology (ICT) division.
Once it was established that the incident was a fraudulent payment scheme, President Yoweri Museveni directed DIS to assist in the investigation. By the end of 2024, at least 21 staff members from BoU, the ministry of Finance, and the Accountant General’s office had been interrogated, and their electronic devices, including mobile phones and laptops, had been confiscated for examination.
Sources informed URN that BoU was able to recover more than half of the Shs 60 billion through UK banks. However, efforts to recover the funds transferred to Asian countries were unsuccessful. Ongoing investigations suggest that the money withdrawn from these foreign accounts was either returned clandestinely to Ugandan beneficiaries in cash or used to procure goods for them.

Thats the end of the 60bn thing, just like the Namujju thing
Sseguya you have a point. The IGG is very much quiet about the whole deal because State House is trying to recover at least some of the money for the sake of public relation. But then $652,588.2 is a lot of money to invest clandestinely to Ugandan beneficiaries in cash or used to procure goods from fast developing Asian countries. One needs to remember that State House under such increased blatant corruption, advised the corrupt NRM diehard entities to bring back such dirty money(criminal money or Mafia proceeds) to Uganda for legitimate investment.