Opposition pressure is mounting in Tanzania following the arrest of Chadema deputy chairperson John Heche, who was detained by police outside the High Court in Dar es Salaam.
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Landslide survivors’ fight for justice reboots with fresh court hearing

KAMPALA , Uganda, 23 October 2025 -/African Media Agency(AMA)/- A group of 48 landslide survivors are appearing once again before the Mbale High Court today in Uganda, just weeks before the heaviest rain season could threaten to bring similar disasters to the area.
Following a landslide in December 2019 that killed dozens in the Bududa district of eastern Uganda, survivors took legal action in 2020 with the support of Ugandan NGO Greenwatch and Kakuru & Co Advocates.
They argued that by failing to establish effective disaster management in Bududa, the government was in breach of the Constitution and other existing laws. [1]
The survivors have demanded emergency systems be put into place in high-risk areas, and that families who lost loved ones receive financial compensation.
The case – stalled for five years due to a procedural technicality – is now back in court, just a year after a similar landslide killed dozens in the neighboring Bulambuli District. [2]
If the judge allows the case to proceed, then the Mbale High Court will begin to examine the case in detail and deal with its core arguments.
Greenwatch Director Samantha Atukunda Kakuru Mwesigwa said:
“Almost five years after the launch of this case, these claimants have not wavered in their fight for justice – and we are proud to stand by them today in court.
“And during this painstaking wait, similar disasters have hit nearby areas – such as the devastating landslide last year in Bulambuli.
“Without the right finance and adaptation measures in place, every town and village in the eastern part of Uganda lives with the fear that tragedy could strike at any moment.
“That’s why these claimants’ case has never been more important. Heavier rainfall wreaks and will continue to wreak havoc in the region – and we are hoping the court gives this case its long-awaited green light to proceed to the next stage.”
Background to the case
Recurrent landslides are an ever-present threat in eastern Uganda, particularly during the rainier months between November and January.
They’ve been happening for decades and have been worsening over time – which is partially due to increased rainfall caused by climate change. [3]
In order to address the growing danger communities in landslide-prone areas face, the Ugandan Government adopted a resettlement plan in 2010. They intended to relocate all those who might be impacted by landslides within 10 years.
However, little progress has been made to date, and only a limited number of people who want to relocate have had the process seen through.
Residents in Bududa, who are primarily subsistence farmers, are also strongly concerned about the suitability of the relocation scheme – particularly when it comes to finding a place to grow and produce food.
All the while, landslides have continued to hit the region. Most recently in Bulambuli, 15 people were killed by a heavy-rainfall-induced landslide – with a further 113 people reported missing by local authorities.
40 houses were swept away by the disaster and the military was deployed to help assist with search and recovery efforts in the aftermath. [4]
Beyond Uganda, climate change-fueled landslides are becoming an increasing risk across the African continent. Heavy rainfall and flash flooding in Sudan reportedly killed hundreds last month, compounding an ongoing humanitarian crisis in the country. [5]
And according to UNICEF, almost one million people across Kenya, Burundi, Tanzania and Somalia were affected in May 2024 by ongoing flooding and landslides. [6]
Distributed by African Media Agency (AMA) on behalf of GreenWatch
Notes to editors
More information on the relationship between climate change and increased landslide risk can be found in the Scientific American piece titled “the Landslide Lurking in Your Backyard”.
- The claimants’ case argues that in addition to violating the Constitution of Uganda, the Ugandan government is in breach of the African Charter on Human and Peoples’ Rights, the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights, the Human Rights Enforcement Act 2019, the Judicature Act and existing case law.
- After its 2020 filing, the High Court of Uganda at Mbale initially dismissed the case on technical grounds in August 2024 and did not engage with the substance of the claimants’ arguments.
- More information on how climate change impacts precipitation is available on NASA’s global precipitation measurement website.
- More information on the November 2024 Bulambuli district landslide is available here.
- More information on the September 2025 landslides is available here.
- Further reading on the impact of flooding and landslides in Eastern Africa is available on UNICEF’s website.
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Blantyre council to demolish over 300 houses
BLANTYRE-(MaraviPost)-Over 300 households who encroached on Soche Hill in Blantyre risk having their homes demolished after the High Court gave a node to the City Council to move them out.
The Council has been entangled in a five-year legal battle with the encroachers after they dragged the council to court, stopping the city assembly from relocating them.
Spokesperson Anthony Kasunda said the illegal settlers have 60 days from January 18th to vacate the area.
“The notice is not only to illegal settlers in Soche Hill but also to those in Mpingwe Hill and Ndirande Hill. At the time when we wanted to move these people out of these areas they obtained a court injunction but now the court has given us powers to move them.
“So we are saying since they used a lot of materials like iron sheets and bricks let them demolish their structures by themselves within these 60 days or we will come in with a bulldozer,” warned Kasunda.
He said the council will only give plots to 65 households in South Lunzu (Machinjiri) to the settlers who were on the protected sites five years ago.
“When we wanted to move them five years ago, they were about 65 households but the number has grown to 300.
So the court has ordered us to make sure we allocate land to these since we had already offered to do so; it will be up to the council to extend the offer to the rest,” he said.