The corruption investigation surrounding Uganda's former Speaker of Parliament Anita Among has taken a turn that has captured the imagination of people across East Africa, after security forces seized a designer dress from her residence whose price tag has left many speechless.
The outfit in question is not just any dress. Among wore it to one of Uganda's most watched state occasions, the recent swearing-in ceremony of President Yoweri Museveni, where it drew admiring attention.
What nobody in that crowd knew at the time was that the garment would later end up as exhibit material in a corruption probe. Ugandan security forces took the dress from Among's home as part of the broader investigation into her wealth, and when the purchase price emerged, public anger reached a new level.
The dress allegedly cost Ksh 1.1 million. That figure, for a single outfit worn to a single event, has become the most talked about detail in a case already overflowing with staggering numbers.
Among faces allegations of money laundering, corruption, and theft of public funds. She served as one of the most powerful figures in Ugandan politics before stepping down from the Speaker's chair, controlling vast budgets and wielding enormous political influence.
The dress has since become a symbol that ordinary Ugandans are using to articulate their frustration. While schools go without resources and hospitals lack basic supplies, a single outfit for a single ceremony reportedly consumed more than most Ugandans earn in years.
A million shilling dress. And a country demanding to know who paid for it.
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