Sam Otada

Samuel Owor Amooti Otada (born 27 October 1971), commonly known as Sam Otada, is a Ugandan businessman and politician. He is the group chairman and group chief executive officer of the Otada Group of Companies, a family-owned business conglomerate.[1] He has been reported to be one of the wealthiest people in Uganda.[2]

Samuel Otada
Born (1971-10-27) 27 October 1971
Kiryandongo, Uganda
NationalityUgandan
CitizenshipUganda
Alma materMakerere University
(Bachelor of Commerce)
OccupationBusinessman & politician
Years active1999 – present
Known forBusiness acumen
TitleGroup chairman
Otada Group of Companies

Otada previously served as member of Parliament for Kibanda County, Kiryandongo District from 2001[3] to 2016.[4]

Background and education

Otada was born in Kiryandongo District, Western Region, on 27 October 1971. He attended Makerere University, Uganda's oldest and largest public university, graduating in 1999, with a Bachelor of Commerce degree.

Career

Otada's father, a businessman and entrepreneur, died in 1999 soon after his youngest son finished his undergraduate studies at Makerere. The young man, at age 28 inherited his father's company, then a bus operator with about 30 buses. Under his leadership, the bus company has grown into four different businesses dealing in transportation, civil engineering, construction, waste management, and mobile telephone airtime.

Otada was elected as the member of Parliament for Kibanda County, Kiryandongo District in 2001.[3] He held the seat in 2006 and 2011.[5] For the 2016 general election, the constituency was split into two, with Otada standing for the new constituency of Kibanda County North on an independent ticket.[4] He lost to Taban Idi Amin,[4] but challenged the result through the courts.[6]

Parliamentary responsibilities

During the ninth Parliament (2011–16), Otada served as the Leader of the Independents in the Ugandan parliament.[7] He sat on the following parliamentary committees:

  • Equal Opportunities Committee
  • Legal and Parliamentary Affairs Committee
gollark: Although yes, you probably can't have everyone run large customer facing businesses.
gollark: Approximately, sure. But with higher skilled jobs. And you could still have offices and whatnot if your contract included coming in to physically work with people.
gollark: > cuz if everyone would run a business things wouldnt go well(responding to this)
gollark: Not under the current model of work, but you could replace "go to work and are paid to do whatever is directed by someone" with "hired on contract to perform some specific task".
gollark: Um, very late, but stuff probably could still work fine if everyone was self-employed in some way.

See also

References

  1. Mwanguhya Mpagi, Charles (17 September 2013). "How Sam Otada Inherited And Grew The Family Business". Daily Monitor (Kampala. Retrieved 29 November 2014.
  2. Norah Chandiru, and Caroline Obira (2012). "All I Wanted Was To Honour Dad's Legacy". New Vision Mobile (Kampala). Retrieved 29 November 2014.
  3. POU (2011). "Profile of Otada Samuel Owor Amooti". Parliament of Uganda (POU). Retrieved 29 November 2014.
  4. Muzoora, George (22 February 2016). "Amin's grandson takes Kibanda North seat". Daily Monitor. Retrieved 28 May 2017.
  5. Mwanguhya Mpagi, Charles (17 September 2013). "How Sam Otada inherited, grew family business". Daily Monitor. Retrieved 28 May 2017.
  6. Nyamahunge, Priscillar (14 September 2016). "Amin's grandson retains Kibanda North seat". New Vision. Retrieved 28 May 2017.
  7. Nakatudde, Olive (30 September 2014). "Parliament Approves Premier Rugunda". Uganda Radio Network (URN). Retrieved 29 November 2014.
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