Faith Without Frontiers
Ugandan Supreme Court Justice Mike Chibita discusses his roles as a Supreme Court justice since early 2020 and as Director of Public Prosecutions (DPP) from 2013–2020, explaining Uganda’s criminal justice system, appeals process, and the Supreme Court’s caseload. He describes learning about victims’ rights during a visit to Adelaide through Advocates International, leading him to create a victims’ rights desk, encourage prosecutors to engage victims beyond evidence, and build partnerships with groups such as Children at Risk Network and Viva International. Chibita contrasts the Supreme Court with the DPP’s extensive constitutional powers, intense media scrutiny, and life-threatening terrorism cases, including the killing of prosecutor Joan Kagezi, and recounts coping through prayer and family support. He reflects on humble beginnings, discipline learned at King’s College Budo, COVID-era court adaptations, observations about mortality, and his books “Loved by the Best” and “Leaders Grieve Last.” 00:48 Meet Justice Chibita 01:00 From Prosecutor to Judge 01:45 What a DPP Does 03:08 Putting Victims First 04:57 Learning in Adelaide 08:33 Partnerships That Help 11:16 Life on the Supreme Court 14:05 COVID Shuts Courts Down 16:39 Time Passing on the Bench 19:03 The Weight of DPP Power 23:25 Prayer Under Pressure 24:55 Assassination Plot Letter 26:11 Family Facing Threats 28:02 Humble Roots to Buddha 31:32 Discipline and Work Ethic 33:19 Writing and Health Scare 37:16 Books and Leaders Grieve 39:54 Faith Reflection and Farewell
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