
According to her account, the child “fell from a window” of their multi-level home after being left briefly unattended.
She said she heard a “loud cry, rushed downstairs, and found him outside on the ground attempting to stand.”
She tried to rush him to the hospital, but her car failed to start.
An ambulance from Kitintale Hospital later picked up the boy, who was examined and given painkillers, with instructions to return the next day for scans.
Death
Hours later, at around 5:00 a.m., his condition worsened, and despite another emergency call and CPR attempts at the hospital, the child was pronounced dead.
However, the boy’s father, businessman and Honorary Consul of Uganda to Zimbabwe, Chris Rugari, has remained deeply suspicious.
He has questioned the timing and circumstances of the boy’s death, insisting it was anything but accidental.
“Let the public not be fed on disinformation and fabricated propaganda meant to divert attention from what killed my child,” Rugari said earlier this week.
“That’s the only thing I care about now.”
As Kanoheri heads to Nakawa High Court, the spotlight now shifts from speculation to legal proceedings—offering a potential breakthrough in the puzzling case.