By Atwemereireho AlexToday, October 7, 2025, Uganda does not merely celebrate another birthday, it commemorates the birth and enduring presence of a man whose life stands as a living rebuttal to the moral decay and expedient politics that have come to define our times. Maj. Gen. (Rtd) Mugisha Gregory Muntu, President of the Alliance for National Transformation (ANT), turns sixty-seven years old today. But we do not count his years; we weigh his substance. We measure a man who has lived not for applause, but for principle; not for privilege, but for purpose. He is not just a name in Uganda’s political memory. He is a moral institution, one of the rare few who have walked through the temptations of power unseduced, who have touched its instruments unsullied. His life, like a disciplined soldier’s stride, has been marked by order, restraint, and fidelity to values. Born in October 1958 in Kitunga Village, Ntungamo District, in the green hills of Ankole, Muntu’s beginnings were carved in both privilege and promise. His father, Enock Ruzima Muntuyera, was not an ordinary man, he was a trusted confidant of President Milton Obote, a man of means and status, whose name still echoes in Muntuyera High School, Kitunga, renamed in his honor. His mother, Aida Matama Muntuyera, instilled in her son a faith anchored in humility and truth. From Mbarara Junior, Kitunga Primary, Muntuyera High School to Makerere College School, and finally Makerere University, where he read Political Science, Muntu’s early journey bore the markings of intellect and reflection. But it was at Makerere that his convictions took final form. Upon completing his final examinations, when others sought comfort, Muntu sought purpose joining the National Resistance Army (NRA), choosing the dangerous path of struggle over the convenient inheritance of influence. That decision alone separated him from his peers. It was a declaration: that his loyalty was to Uganda, not to personal privilege. Maj. Gen. Muntu’s military life reads like a disciplined sonnet, composed in pain, purpose, and principle. He entered the bush war a young idealist and emerged a commander forged in sacrifice. He was shot in the chest, nearly lost his life, and yet never abandoned the cause. When his father died during the war, he did not return home for burial. Duty came before grief. Principle came before comfort. After the NRA’s victory in 1986, he became Head of Military Intelligence, and by 1989, Commander of the Army (later UPDF). But unlike many who saw the uniform as a ladder to privilege, he saw it as a covenant of service. As Commander, he demobilized unruly sections, demanded accountability in procurement, and sought to reform the army into an institution of discipline rather than patronage. He refused to accumulate wealth through corruption or proximity to power. To him, the army was not a marketplace of favors but a sacred trust for the defense of the Republic. His tenure defined a new moral order in the military: quiet, firm, and incorruptible. Even his adversaries respected his unyielding integrity. In a time when power intoxicated, Muntu remained sober. When he left the army, Maj. Gen. Muntu did not retire from duty; he simply changed his battlefield. As a delegate to the Constituent Assembly (1994–1995), he contributed to the birth of the 1995 Constitution, one of the most important legal documents in Uganda’s post-independence history. Later, as a Member of the East African Legislative Assembly, and eventually President of the Forum for Democratic Change (FDC) (2012–2017), he continued to advocate for rule-based politics and ethical governance. Yet Muntu’s greatest political test came not from the state but from within the opposition. When populism began to overshadow ideology, when noise became a substitute for strategy, Muntu chose principle over popularity. In 2018, he founded the Alliance for National Transformation (ANT), a political movement not built around personalities, but around systems, values, and a vision of national renewal. In an age of theatrics, Muntu preaches quiet revolution, institutional integrity, ethical leadership, and long-term transformation. He does not promise miracles; he promises structure. He does not flatter emotions; he appeals to reason. In doing so, he challenges Uganda to mature politically, to build a country not around strong men, but around strong systems. Maj. Gen. Muntu’s critics often say he is “too quiet,” “too clean,” or “too slow” for Uganda’s raw political terrain. But that criticism misunderstands his mission. Muntu’s politics is not built on the adrenaline of populism; it is founded on the architecture of conscience. He is a man of delayed gratification in a culture addicted to instant results. He has paid the price for refusing shortcuts. Yet even in the wilderness of political misinterpretation, Muntu has not changed course. He remains Uganda’s most consistent advocate for ethical governance, believing that the greatest revolution is not in the streets, but in the moral reconstruction of citizens and institutions. His is a campaign not of slogans, but of substance. His call is not for anger, but for awakening. He embodies a conviction that Uganda’s rebirth will not come from loudness but from lawfulness, not from defiance alone but from discipline, not from vengeance but from vision. In an era where the corridors of power are choked with scandal and mediocrity, Maj. Gen. Muntu is a rare sight, a statesman untainted, a patriot uncorrupted. He has shown that leadership is not about how many cheer you, but how many you can serve without betraying principle. He dreams of a Uganda where the farmer in Ntungamo, the teacher in Gulu, the nurse in Arua, and the graduate in Mbale all have equal opportunity; where the army protects, not intimidates; where institutions outlive politicians; where power rotates peacefully; where service is honorable again. As he prepares for the 2026 presidential race, Muntu carries not the noise of ambition, but the calm fire of conviction. His message is clear: Uganda can be meet and fresh again new in spirit, fresh in governance, disciplined in purpose. As Uganda celebrates his 67th birthday, we must pause not merely to sing “Happy Birthday,” but to ask: What kind of nation produces a Muntu, and what kind of nation rejects him? For in celebrating him, we also judge ourselves. We live in an age that rewards cunning over character, noise over knowledge, and populism over principle. Yet Muntu’s life stands like a lighthouse steady amid storm, silent but guiding. If Uganda is ever to reclaim her moral center, she will need to listen to the still voice of such men: not shouting, not scheming, but serving. Maj. Gen. (Rtd) Gregory Mugisha Muntu, we celebrate you not merely for surviving the seasons, but for standing above them. You are proof that decency still breathes, that honesty still leads, that patriotism still pays, if not in wealth, then in honor. May this year bring you deeper strength, renewed courage, and a widening circle of Ugandans ready to embrace your creed: that power is service, not possession; leadership is stewardship, not dominance; politics is purpose, not performance. Your name, General, has become both a memory and a message, a reminder that Uganda still has moral sons, and that integrity is still a revolutionary act. Happy Birthday, Maj. Gen. Muntu. May the Republic you have served so faithfully find in you the reflection of what it must yet become – meet, fresh, and free. The writer is a lawyer, researcher and governance analyst and can be reached at alexatweme@gmail.com.