HomePress ReleasesUgandan provincial tribunal commissioned

Ugandan provincial tribunal commissioned

Published on

Please Help Anglican.Ink with a donation.

Earlier today, (7 Oct 2025) the Archbishop of the Church of Uganda, The Most Rev Dr Stephen Samuel Kaziimba Mugalu commissioned the Provincial Tribunal to handle disputes within the Church.

‎Before being commissioned, the Tribunal underwent orientation with Justice Mike Chibita of the Supreme Court as the lead facilitator.

‎Members of the Tribunal include; Canon Naboth Muhairwe the Provincial Chancellor as the Chairman of the Tribunal, Bishop Prof. Fred Sheldon Mwesigwa of Ankole Diocese, Bishop Onesimus Asiimwe of North Kigezi Diocese, Bishop Pons Awinjo Ozelle of Nebbi Diocese, Bishop James Bukomeko of Mityana Diocese, Bishop George Turyasingura of East Ruwenzori and Bishop John Wilson Nandaah of Mbale Diocese.

‎Others are Justice Hellen Obura representing the Laity and The Very Rev. Canon. Dr. Rebecca Nyegenye representing the Clergy,

Latest articles

Bishop dies after fall from a roadway overpass, police investigating

Police are investigating the death of the Church of South India’s Bishop in Erode–Salem...

Statement of Faith Leaders in Wales on Assisted Suicide

Faith leaders in Wales have issued a statement expressing their opposition to the Government’s...

The discussion at the end of the LLF process

Yesterday in Synod, we spent five hours (yes, five!) on what is likely to...

The Making of the Christian Man

We live at a hard time for young men in our country. It’s a...

Episcopal Church releases 2026 Budget

TEC-2026-Budget-FINAL-EC-Approved-PDF (1)Download

More like this

Bishop dies after fall from a roadway overpass, police investigating

Police are investigating the death of the Church of South India’s Bishop in Erode–Salem...

Statement of Faith Leaders in Wales on Assisted Suicide

Faith leaders in Wales have issued a statement expressing their opposition to the Government’s...

The discussion at the end of the LLF process

Yesterday in Synod, we spent five hours (yes, five!) on what is likely to...