There
has been a change in the old guard. Ten or so years ago, the old people
who were associated with money and who threw money about were the likes
of Ruparelia, Wava, Zzimwe and Lalani for example.
Then
and out of the blue emerged a Michael Ezra who openly flaunted large
wads of dollars. But the difference between Ruparelia, Wava, Zzimwe and
Lalani is that we knew where their money came from and we could trace
it.
On the other hand, we didn’t know where Ezra’s money came from and to-date we still don’t know where it all started.
Ezra’s
stunt opened Pandora’s Box that suddenly Kampala was awash with young
men and women who drove expensive cars and made it their mission to
throw money about without a care in the world.
But
with Bad Black languishing in Luzira, Judith Heard keeping a low
profile, Susan Ochola having run out of ideas, Ezra who seems to have
gone underground and Zari who is yesterday’s news, there was a vacuum
and sensing an opportunity to exploit not only himself but the public
too into the mix emerged Ivan Semwanga.
Mukulu
Ivan as some of his associates refer to him is known as the better half
of Zari. In their relationship, it was always Zari in the limelight and
the one, who seemingly had the money.
Why Ivan decided to emerge from Zari’s skirt remains a mystery but he is here and in our faces trying to prove a point. If
anything I feel he would have been happier to stay under her skirt, but
circumstances and the mystery surrounding their split (though he denies
they have split) may have forced him and for a lack of a better word to
use, to ‘show his balls’ that it was he who all along had the money and
that Zari was just riding on his back.
Getting
hold of Ivan is no easy affair. He is a regular at Fusion Auto Spa on
Munyonyo road, where he is keen to show off his worth by buying numerous
beers by the crate for whoever is there.
Such
is his economic power that the Congolese and Nigerian’s who are laden
with bling, drive expensive cars and come across as having money, have
been forced to relocate from Fusion Auto Sap to a downtown bar in
Kansanga where they can hold their own and not be over shadowed by Ivan.
Whenever he
drives in, he comes with an entourage of at least 30 people and in a
number of cars – Hummer, Mercedes ML, Nissan Elgrad, BMW. Why he needs
all those cars for an outing, only he knows.
His
‘people’ are fiercely protective of him that they thwarted my first
three attempts to talk to him asking what it is that I wanted with him. I
did eventually get to him and set up an appointment for the following
day.
Ivan
does not carry a cellphone because he has a number of ‘aides’ to do
that for him nor does he carry money because once again there is an
‘aide’ tasked with that job.
We
met at Hotel Bavita in Makerere for this interview and what I thought
would be a one-one-interview turned out to be a one-on-forty interview.
His baleebesi
were everywhere, each wanting to answer whatever question it is that I
asked and he was happy enough to let them go ahead. Just as I had
suspected, there was a communication problem not only between Ivan and I
but between his baleebsi and I.
The
funny thing about Ivan is that as much as he throws a dime about, he
comes across as a rather shy and insecure man enough to suggest he was
bullied at school. And there is nothing flamboyant about him. His watch
was a plebe watch that was seemingly bought from a hawker near Radio One
for 10k.
I throw at him the million dollar question: “How did you make your dime and how much are you worth?” to which the baleebesi were keen to answer but without putting a finger on the pulse.
All
I managed to extract from them is that he worked very hard in South
Africa and has two BMW’s, a Lamborghini, Aston Martin, Jaguar, Rolls
Royce amongst many other cars.
Of course I was skeptical about all this because the chief muleebesi
I am sure would not be able to tell the difference between an Aston
Martin and a Lamborghini even if the makers’ badges were on them.
Ivan
tells me that his cars and his property in South Africa which includes
schools, apartments and commercial buildings have not been bought with
bank loans. He says, “When I buy things I pay cash. Recently I bought
another school called Heartland and which has four branches in South
Africa for one million US dollars” to which I responded, “but where did
you get the money from?” The response was quick enough – “from my bank
account.”
He also has a hotel in Uganda though he wouldn’t tell me which one it is, houses and numerous apartments.
But that still does not answer the question of how a young man from Kayunga in Bugerere has access to that kind of money.
At this point the baleebesi
are in full cry because another round of drinks has been ordered for
and there is debate of whether they should go to Fusion Auto Spa or not.
“I really have to go” he tells me. “You can ask a couple more questions
but I really have to go”.
I
ask him about the Namboole helicopter stunt. “I was in Kenya and I
really wanted to watch the match (Cranes vs. Zambia) but getting a
flight from Nairobi to be here in time was cutting it tight. A
helicopter was more practical. And for that ‘practical ride’ he says he
paid $18,000.
I throw at him more questions but he has lost interest in me and the interview and suggests we conclude in Club Silk.
If it has been hard enough to do an interview in the bar at Hotel Bativa and with his forty baleebesi crowding me, would it be any easier in Club Silk? I pass on his suggestion.
When
he walked to the car park, if the anti riot police had been around,
they would have wasted no time in breaking them up as they would have
thought it was a demonstration in the making.
He
opted to be driven in the Mercedes ML and as it screeched away leaving a
dust bowl in its wake, I suddenly realized I was no wiser as to knowing
who Ivan Semwanga is and how he actually made his money.
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