
An artistic impression of the six-storey building that will serve as the Embuga y’Abataka at Mengo, whose construction was flaged off by President Museneni on July 25, 2025
HABARI DAILY I Kampala, Uganda I The Uganda People’s Defence Forces (UPDF) Construction Brigade will soon break ground for the construction of Lwattamu House, whose building is expected to take up to Shs 58 billion.
President Yoweri Museveni on Friday, July 25, 2025, officiated at the groundbreaking ceremony for the construction of the landmark six-storey building that will serve as the Embuga y’Abataka (traditional headquarters for clan leaders) at Mengo in Kampala.
The monumental project, which is spearheaded by the Bataka (clan heads) of Buganda, is part of a broader initiative to support cultural institutions and foster national unity.
The 6-floor complex will be constructed on 2.7 acres of prime land near the Lubiri in Mengo, which the President purchased for Shs 9.7 billion as part of a pledge made during a June 8, 2024, meeting with the Bataka at State House, Entebbe.
The building will house 52 offices for clan leaders, business and banking halls, a museum, conference rooms, and lodging facilities, among other income-generating initiatives. Completion is expected within three years.
Museveni also recalled his decades-long relationship with the Buganda Kingdom, tracing it back to 1981 when he met Kabaka Ronald Muwenda Mutebi in London.
Meeting with Kabaka Mutebi
“I met my young brother, Kabaka Mutebi, in London in 1981 while on a mission to see Gaddafi. I told him then that I saw no problem if we’re clear on who can do what between us—the new forces—and the traditionalists,” said the President Museveni.
He recounted his advocacy for traditional institutions, even during the liberation struggle, recalling how he persuaded the National Resistance Army’s council in Gulu to embrace cultural structures rather than oppose them.
“When we were fighting against Idi Amin and Obote, there were Bataka who stood with us, such as Kezrone Ssonko in Luwero, the Balangira, and the Bambejja. Before I went to the bush, I visited Omumbejja Nalinya Ndagire in Lubaga and Omulangira Badru Kakungulu in Kibuli,” he noted.
The President reflected on the 1900 Buganda Agreement and how the Bataka were marginalized by colonial policies. He emphasized that restoring kingdoms in the 1990s should have gone hand-in-hand with reintegrating clan leadership into the cultural fabric of Uganda.
“Part of our strength as Africans is our culture and our genetics. Clan structures discourage inbreeding and promote diversity. While the government builds roads and electricity, who is preserving our genetics and languages? Clan leaders play that vital role,” he said.
President Museveni pledged a series of financial and logistical support initiatives aimed at empowering the Bataka: these included Shs 58 billion for the construction of Lwattamu House, a Shs 100 million donation to the Bataka Mutindo SACCO (with over 700 members), and a Shs 22 million cash donation to support a retreat for Balangira and Bambejja.
The President also promised to buy land for Bataka to establish a goat farming project in Nakasongola district.
The head of the Nvuma clan, Omutaka Kyaddondo Kasirye Mbag’elamula, expressed deep gratitude to the President for what he described as unprecedented direct support to the Bataka.
“No President has ever supported us directly apart from you. Your purchase of land at Mengo and backing for the Lwattamu House project is historic. This will be remembered by generations,” said Kasirye.