Ponsiano Lwakataka Steps Into The Shadows AnnouncingA Heartbreaking Pause For Uganda’s Rally Daredevil.
ByMwambazi Lawrence
Twenty-five years of dust, danger, roaring engines, and an unshakable passion that refused to burn out and now, suddenly, a silence. Uganda’s rally icon and daredevil Ponsiano “Mafu Mafu” Lwakataka, has announced he is stepping away from active rallying, a decision that has sent a cold wave of disbelief through his loving fans. For a man who turned every stage into a battlefield and every corner into a lesson in courage, this pause feels like the end of an era a moment that reminds us that even the strongest heroes sometimes need to breathe, reflect, and rebuild.

It is not the kind of story anyone prepares for. Not after a season where Lwakataka defied age, defied the odds, defied machinery itself conquering 4 of the 7 NRC rallies and reminding the nation that legends are not born; they are forged in fire. But behind those shining victories stood a man who knew the truth in his heart: he was driving a machine that had given him everything it had left. His faithful Subaru Impreza N12b the warrior he had pushed, punished, trusted, and carried to glory for six unforgettable years could no longer fight against the new, faster generation of rally machines.
And so, for the first time in decades, Lwakataka has chosen to step back. Not in defeat, not in bitterness, but in humility. In gratitude. In a quiet, emotional acceptance that even the mightiest engines must one day rest. He steps away not as a fallen champion, but as a man who understands the beauty of knowing when to pause, breathe, and honor the journey that made him a legend.

Lwakataka’s story is not written in ink it is carved in scars, dust, dents, and memories that have refused to fade. His journey began in 2000 at the Pearl of Africa Rally, where a young, hungry dreamer showed up in a humble Toyota Levin he had hustled to buy from Afande Lule for 3.5 million shillings. No one looked twice at Car 40, and even fewer expected anything Lwakataka codriven by the late Sgt. Pamba. But by Day 3, that quiet man had shaken the entire rally fraternity. From the belly of the pack, he fought his way up to an astonishing 3rd overall a rise so electrifying it felt like watching destiny announce itself. And just when glory seemed within reach, fate twisted the knife: the Levin gave up barely 1km to the final flag.
Yet even in disappointment, Lwakataka walked away not as a defeated driver, but as a newly forged hero. His courage earned him a meritorious award the first of many signs that Uganda had just witnessed the birth of a man who would one day redefine the sport.
In 2001, he stepped into a Subaru Legacy a car that tested his spirit harder than any stage ever could. Out of 10 rallies, he finished only one, dragging the wounded machine across the Mbarara finish line for a modest 7th place. Most drivers would have walked away, defeated by the frustration, the cost, and the heartbreak. But Lwakataka was not “most drivers.” He refused to quit.
Then came 2002, and with it, the arrival of the N4. It was fast, wild, and unforgiving a machine he rolled more times than he cares to count. Yet every time he did finish, he was right there among the top runners, proving that even in chaos, his talent was undeniable.

And then came 2003… the year that almost broke him. A horrific roll wrote off the car completely and left his codriver, Sgt. Pamba (RIP), without two fingers. For many, that would have been the final chapter the moment fear takes over and the helmet goes into storage forever But for Lwakataka, it was not the end. It was just a bend in the road. A painful, life-changing bend.
He bought another N4, partnered with George Semakula, and what followed was nothing short of magic. Their chemistry was effortless, their determination identical, and by the end of the season they were ranked No. 3 in the country a remarkable rebound from the ashes of the previous years. Then came 2004, with Lwakataka behind the wheel of a Subaru Impreza N6, quietly sharpening his claws, preparing for the explosion that would come in 2005: his first-ever NRC championship title. He would lift another crown in 2007, cementing his place among Uganda’s greatest.

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In 2008, Lwakataka did something few champions ever do he stepped aside and handed the mantle to his wife, Rose Lwakataka, with Semakula navigating. But legends do not sit still for long. The itch returned, the fire whispered, and by late 2009, he stormed back onto the scene with a vengeance. His weapon of choice was a fearsome Subaru Impreza N8, later christened “Magege,” a machine that terrorized competitors and dominated headlines. With Musa Nsubuga in the navigator’s seat, he delivered one of his greatest triumphs winning the prestigious 2011 KCB Pearl of Africa Rally.
Then came 2019, a decade after the glory of Magege, when he acquired the Subaru Impreza N12b from Jas Mangat a car that would become his loyal companion for six unforgettable years. A machine that carried his dreams, his battles, and his legacy… right up to this emotional moment of taking a breaak.

As emotional as this moment is for Ponsiano, he refuses to move forward without honoring those who held him up when life and rallying knocked him down: Shemi Senkatuka, whose Land Cruiser towed his car to countless venues; Mayanja Godfrey, treasurer and pillar behind the N12b fundraising; Mucakaze Jamil, the tireless coordinator who kept the team running; Mr. Sentamu, always ready with the car carrier; and all the Manyi Gabantu, mechanics, fans, and brothers who stood by him for over seven years — he bows deeply in gratitude. Yet even as he steps back, his heart has not retired, nor has his spirit dimmed. The fire inside him still burns, but the Subaru N12b can no longer match it. He promises that when funding allows, he will return stronger, louder, faster. For now, however, the man who terrified stages, thrilled fans, and defied physics rests painfully, emotionally, but proudly. He leaves a happy man, a legend, and a space in Uganda’s rallying that only he can ever fill.
