Uganda: Justice Arach burial: Court orders widower to file defense

Uganda: Justice Arach burial: Court orders widower to file defense

Written by URN

Justice Stella Arach Amoko's body being carried into parliament on Wednesday

Justice Stella Arach Amoko’s body being carried into parliament on Wednesday

Justice Stella Arach Amoko’s widower, Ambassador James Idule Amoko has been ordered by the High court to file his defense today Friday after he was sued by his children over the burial of their mother. 

Idule was sued alongside the Attorney General. Family Division judge Ketra Kitarisiibwa Katunguka on Thursday said that the case shall proceed today Friday by oral testimony. Both the Attorney General and Idule were not present in court nor represented.

The order follows an application in which three of Arach’s children; Yossa Annette, Emmanuel Komakech, and Jackie Amony, and their uncle, Godfrey Picho and aunt, Christine Onyok who are the siblings of the deceased sued the government and Idule.

The suit filed Thursday afternoon came after the two families disagreed on where to bury the deceased. The deceased’s husband wants her buried in Adjumani district while the children prefer Nebbi district. 

The burial had earlier been scheduled for Friday but was halted after the judiciary chief registrar Sarah Langa Siu issued a statement indicating that the date has been postponed until further notice. 

In the application, the applicants through their lawyers led by Pius Katumba Busobozi and Stanley Okecho are seeking an order restraining the government and Amoko from receiving, transporting, and burying the body of the deceased in Adjumani district.  

They also want the court to be authorized to receive, transport, and bury their mother at her family/ancestral home burial ground at Jukiga Hill Ward, Juba village, Nebbi district in accordance with the customary law of ker kwaro Kaal Jonam. 

In the alternative, the children are saying if the government and Idule go ahead and bury their mother in Adjumani, they should be authorized to exhume and rebury the body of their late mother in a place of her choice in Nebbi.

Evidence before court shows that when Arach was in the hospital, she called her sister Onyok and brother Picho and expressed to them her wish to be buried in Nebbi district at her ancestral home.

“The judiciary had earlier been misguided to publicly announce Adjumani as the final resting place of our mother.  We pray that we are allowed to grieve and heal in peace through this funeral of our mother,” reads the affidavit of one of Yossa.

The family asserts that the children have no connection to Adjumani, their paternal ancestral home, and have never been introduced to the place or shown any land or property there.

On another note, Kaal Ker Kwaro Jonam Kapita, the cultural institution of the Jonam, released a June 19 statement to the judiciary stating that Arach be laid to rest at the royal burial grounds at Kaal Ragem in Pakwach district. 

They urged the judiciary to respect Amoko’s wish to be buried next to her father in Nebbi. Reports suggest that the decision to bury Arach was made during a meeting at the President’s office, from which the children and relatives claim they were excluded. At the moment, Arach’s remains are still at A Plus funeral home, A Plus.

Source The Observer.

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