I'd rather play drums under water than continue this debate.
You said this a hundred times before. But you keep wading back into it, full throttle.
Jasusi, as much as you may sympathize with Ballali's family and find our discussions absurd, you may not wish this thing away. It's not as negligible to everybody else as you would like to think.
I believe that most conspiracy theories are simply absurd. The idea that Anna Muganda has feigned his husband's death, that she planted a phantom body in the casket and took it to church, and lied to her friends and Government officials about all this thing, I think is extremely far-fetched, if not preposterous. I just don't fall for such home-made "dataz" without sensible substantiation.
Indeed, if I was in Anna Muganda's shoes, and truly believed that my husband had been smeared and scapegoated by some vicious corrupt officials, I probably wouldn't even invite the Ambassodor to the funeral, let alone tell him. I appreciate all that aspect of Muganda's possible thinking.
However, this is no ordinary death, and the whole thing is shrouded in mystery, and you know it. Ballali was not a regular Chumvi na Nyonzo. A central Bank was robbed of national treasure under his charge, before he eased off the face of the earth to "a hospital." We, the People, I think, and you will be kind to agree, have every right to ask questions regarding this dark death. The government is so secretive it would not tell us who they were paying to treat the ex-governor in America. Anna Muganda has orchestrated this secret band of obfuscation and confusion. So the people go about piercing together every little information they can get - on their own. And in such giddy desperation for information, every source of "dataz" becomes an insider authority. The good, the bad and ugly.
Anna Muganda knew that her decisions would engender such invasive, probing, and often besmirching speculations. And she can, and should, do everything to protect her privacy from our inquiry. Just as you can not fault her for exercising her prerogative to protect herself, you can not blame us for exercising our civic responsibility, human responsibility, to protect what belongs to us. And it begins with searching for the truth as to what transpired at BOT so it won't happen again.
Somebody broke into the bank in broad daylight and stole national treasure, and we are out to get him or her!