JINJA – A prominent multimillionaire tycoon is facing the prospect of spending a decade behind bars after he was sensationally hauled to a police cell for allegedly “smothering” a vital Ugandan wetland.
Magan Patel, the 68-year-old founder of the sprawling MMP Group empire, was dramatically detained during a high-stakes weekend raid.
The industrialist—whose business interests range from edible oils to massive manufacturing plants—now faces a humiliating 12-year prison sentence or a staggering 600 million shilling fine for what officials are calling a “war on nature.”
CAUGHT RED-HANDED
The drama unfolded in the Masese II area of Jinja City, where a joint task force from the National Environment Management Authority pounced on a fleet of seven massive trucks and two tractors.
Officials say the heavy machinery was caught in the act of dumping mountains of murram into a protected wetland, effectively burying a delicate ecosystem alive under a sea of red earth.
“No one is above the law,” a source close to the investigation warned. “It doesn’t matter how deep your pockets are or how many factories you own. If you kill our wetlands, you will answer for it.”

LIVELIHOODS DESTROYED
The alleged environmental carnage has left a trail of destruction for local families. Small-scale fish farmers, many of whom had invested their meager savings via the government’s Parish Development Model, watched in horror as their ponds were reportedly swallowed by the dumping.
One distraught farmer, Julius Kayiira, claimed he lost over 1,000 fish in the blink of an eye. “They were buried alive,” he cried. “The tycoon’s machines just moved in and crushed our dreams.”
A FALL FROM GRACE
For decades, Patel has been a titan of industry in the Jinja and Buikwe districts, heading firms such as Nile Agro Industries. But on Sunday, the boardroom was replaced by a police station as the aging tycoon was processed alongside four of his associates.
NEMA has recently turned up the heat on wealthy encroachers, as 2025 data shows Uganda’s wetlands are finally seeing a slight recovery to 13.9 percent coverage. The agency is now making a public example of those who threaten this progress, gazetting thousands of areas to protect them from the “insatiable” expansion of industrial giants.

