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Insight Post Uganda
Home Opinion

ENGINEERING AN ABSURDITY: When Protectors Of Public Safety Become Persecutors Of Law

Insight Post Uganda by Insight Post Uganda
May 5, 2026
in Opinion
Reading Time: 5 mins read
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Engineer

Engineer supervising construction works.

In the corridors of professional integrity, a sacred trust exists: those who guard the gates of excellence must be bound by the laws they enforce. When a gavel falls in the absence of the accused and a closed room replaces the resonance of a fair hearing, the architecture of justice crumbles.

This institutional failure was laid bare in the case of Eng. Fredrick Mubiru v. Engineers Registration Board (2024), where the High Court was moved on appeal to quash and set aside a decision born of procedural shortcuts.

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By condemning a professional without a summons, the Board committed a form of administrative arson, burning the bridge of trust between the citizen and the state.

In this theater of the absurd, the regulators became the wrecking balls, dismantling the fundamental pillars of natural justice in a frantic pursuit of a toughness that the Constitution simply does not recognize.

This analysis is informed by a comprehensive review of the judgment in Eng. Fredrick Mubiru v. Engineers Registration Board (Civil Appeal No. 0087 of 2024).

The ruling, which provides a definitive account of the Board’s procedural overreach and the subsequent judicial correction, is officially documented by the Judiciary.

For those seeking the full legal context of the appellant’s victory, the judgment is available on the Uganda Legal Information Institute (ULII) portal at the following link: https://ulii.org/ug/judgment/hc-civil-division-uganda/2024/202.

The judicial scrutiny in this appeal stands as a scathing indictment of administrative hubris, serving as a reminder that the hallmark of an enlightened society is not the absence of grievances but the presence of a reliable and legally anchored mechanism to resolve them.

When professional regulatory bodies abandon the altar of due process, they do not merely fail an individual member; they commit institutional suicide.

This raises pertinent questions that strike at the heart of our regulatory framework: Whose interest do these boards truly serve? Are they guardians of public safety, or have they morphed into tools for professional elimination?

One must wonder if the Board is genuinely constituted of competent members, or if we are witnessing a collection of technically proficient individuals who have become so blinded by the routine of signing sitting allowances that they have lost sight of the real issues and the legal frameworks they are sworn to uphold.

The allegations leveled against the appellant were undoubtedly grave, involving technical concerns and reports of structural failures that carry immense weight in the public interest.

Yet, in the eyes of the law, the gravity of an allegation is never a license for the summary suspension of the Constitution.

The Board’s decision to issue an omnibus suspension, a crude bundling of prior issues with a fresh incident without a new summons, displayed staggering incompetence.

This was not a minor oversight; it was a wholesale abandonment of the audi alteram partem rule. This ancient pillar of justice dictates that no person, regardless of the darkness of the clouds hanging over their head, should be condemned unheard.

When the High Court, under Hon. Justice Esta Nambayo, nullified the suspension, it issued a stern reminder that the right to a fair hearing under Article 28 of the 1995 Constitution is non-derogable.

In the legal hierarchy of Uganda, this right cannot be sacrificed for convenience or political expediency. One must wonder whose interests were truly being served by this reckless shortcut.

When a regulatory body bypasses the law to punish based on external recommendations from state agents or the whispers of competitors, it ceases to be a guardian of the public interest and becomes a weaponized bureaucracy that serves malice rather than merit.

Such actions give the impression that the purported allegations were merely watered-down pretenses for a pre-determined outcome, stripping the Board of its capacity to stand for the truth.

The most dangerous consequence of such institutional arrogance is that it inadvertently rehabilitates the very individuals the Board seeks to discipline. When a council abuses due process, they grant a procedural amnesty to the accused.

By failing to follow the law, the Board forces the Judiciary to reinstate the individual, leaving the regulator unable to enforce immediate sanctions. In this vacuum of justice, the alleged shortcomings of an individual are overshadowed by the manifest incompetence of the regulator.

The court must protect the constitutional right over the administrative grievance, meaning even a professional who may have failed their duty is ushered back into the fold because the institution failed its own duty first.

This does not just stall justice; it glorifies flaws by making the accused a martyr of a broken system. In the future, this failure to do the right thing may inadvertently accommodate a person with glaring flaws simply because the regulator lacked the procedural discipline to prove their case legally.

The administrative machinery of any modern state rests upon the predictability of its processes. When the Board received new allegations in June 2024, they faced a choice: follow the path of the law or succumb to the siren song of administrative convenience.

By choosing the latter, they rendered their own disciplinary committee a worthless entity. Justice Nambayo’s ruling is a masterclass in restorative justice, emphasizing that while the Board has a duty to manage misconduct, that duty is subservient to the Constitution.

To allow a case to proceed to appeal where the breach of natural justice is as visible as a structural crack in a skyscraper suggests a profound breakdown in internal counsel. It suggests that the Board believed itself to be above the law or that it was serving an agenda where the law became a secondary concern.

This case serves as a final, booming warning to all government agencies and statutory bodies: the era of administrative shortcuts is over.

Whether it is a licensing board, a district council, or a national ministry, every decision that affects the rights and livelihoods of citizens must align with the full spectrum of legal requirements. Reckless, biased decisions do not just damage targets; they bleed the state dry.

They lead to unnecessary litigation, massive legal expenses, and irreparable reputational damage. When an institution loses its credibility in the High Court, it loses its moral authority to regulate its members.

We must also caution that all government bodies should ensure their decisions align with all legal requirements. The habit of acting on orders from above to bypass the law is a cancer in our administrative state.

It creates a culture where litigation is the only way to seek justice, draining the public purse. Any sensible institution must realize that the shortest path to justice is always the one that follows the law.

Ignoring the requirements of a fair hearing is a disaster of professional ethics that turns a regulatory body into a worthless relic of institutional vanity.

If our regulatory bodies are to survive the scrutiny of the 21st century, they must return to the basics of natural justice. The High Court has spoken: the Constitution is the only state instrument whose authority truly matters.

To ignore the right to be heard is to engineer a collapse far more devastating than any structural failure; it is the collapse of the rule of law itself. Any board that dares to bypass this principle is not just failing a professional; they are failing the Republic. Follow the law, or step aside.

By Twiine Mansio Charles

 

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