Kampala — Never one to mince words, controversial academic Stella Nyanzi has reignited her long-standing feud with the National Unity Platform, labelling Bobi Wine’s supporters a “cult of empty-brained followers.”
The scathing critique comes in the wake of the opposition leader’s abrupt departure into exile—a move Nyanzi claims exposes a glaring double standard among those who once shamed her for fleeing the country. From questioning the veracity of his exit to mocking the sudden “strategic” rebranding of exile, Nyanzi’s latest broadside has turned social media into a battlefield over leadership, loyalty, and political hypocrisy.
Nyanzi accused Bobi Wine’s supporters of blindly accepting his statements without questioning them. “Observing their dogmatic belief which allows neither questioning nor sifting through his gymnastics, I am glad my head resisted his leadership many years ago,” she wrote.
She highlighted what she sees as a double standard among the opposition leader’s followers: previously, she said, they shamed all exiles and labeled them “deserters of Uganda’s liberation struggle.” Yet now, she claims, Bobi Wine’s exit to exile is being celebrated as a strategic move to continue the struggle from abroad.
“Yesterday, this cult of Bobi Wine’s empty-brained followers insulted me because of my post highlighting their hypocrisy,” Nyanzi said. She also questioned the veracity of Bobi Wine’s departure, suggesting he might still be in Uganda to mislead pursuers: “What if Bobi Wine is still hiding in Mbarara or Mbale? What if Bobi Wine is, indeed, a liar?”
In a follow-up post, she mocked the reversal in the narrative surrounding exile: “Now that @HEBobiWine has fled from Uganda and gone to exile, will all those idiots who mocked me for fleeing to exile mock him too? Will they call him a deserter of Uganda’s liberation struggle, just like they called me?”
Nyanzi concluded her remarks with a sardonic welcome: “In the meantime, welcome Ka-blaza Bobi to ekizayiro! I was waiting for you.”
Her posts have sparked heated debate on social media, with supporters of Bobi Wine defending the decision to leave Uganda, while critics echo Nyanzi’s concerns about uncritical followership and inconsistencies in the opposition’s messaging.
The exchanges reflect broader tensions in Uganda’s political discourse, especially around leadership accountability, exile politics, and the treatment of activists and opposition figures.