Just when Uganda thought the Canary–Sasha saga couldn’t burn any hotter, Sasha Ferguson returned with another fiery, emotional message — this time more personal, more spiritual, and more explosive than anything she has said so far.
In her latest outburst, Sasha opened with a warning that felt like thunder rolling in:
She declared that “Not today. You can collect as many people to stand with you in order to weaken this one small human for standing up for the truth but I have a Big God.” It was the tone of a woman who has decided she has nothing left to lose, no fear left to entertain, and no intention of backing down.
She went on to say that Canary knows exactly “who I was to you. Even at the face of your betrayal over and over again… I stood beside you.” According to her, today requires her to stand alone and be the voice that could save “the father of my children (a great talent) blinded by the alcohol demon and the thought of fame being everything.”
To Sasha, this is not a battle of right versus wrong — at least not publicly. She reminded him that “we were once a family, we can’t get to this,” before asking whether he could “at least think about your health and your children?” She warned him that the people he is allegedly trying to impress won’t be around when the consequences come, insisting, “It has robbed you of family. You think it will stop at that?”
But the most shocking twist came when she addressed the issue of child access. Sasha claimed that Canary cannot see the children because, as she put it, “violence was extended to them too and to your mother-in-law when you ambushed her at home to forcefully take the children.” She then dared him to retrieve hotel footage, including from the same hotel where they celebrated her birthday last year, saying that the cameras would show “how violent your wife was.”
The accusations didn’t stop there. She reminded him that she has been “taking flights since we were 19,” seemingly mocking suggestions that she was living off his status or income. She also accused him of being quick to take public credit while ignoring the work she put in “on ground.”
One of the most painful moments in her message came when she revisited a past confrontation, saying “When I left, this is the narrative you and your people created — that I was beating you.” She recalled a statement from her mother-in-law that cut deep: “Abakazi abakuba abasajja.”
Sasha said she was heavily pregnant at the time, in tears, wondering who she could even talk to because her reality felt like “it was better to strangle me dead without fighting for my life.” She accused Canary of going around showing people “a finger/hand that squeezed my small neck, choking for my life, labeling me violent,” calling it heartless — especially after throwing him “a big 30 b.de.”
She added bitterly: “You appreciated me with a fight despite being a nakawere.” And in one of the most emotionally heavy lines, she said, “May God bless you with a good woman I was unable to be.”
Her final blow was a plea mixed with exhaustion and an ultimatum: “Enough is enough, please seek help so that you are able to see your children.” She accused him of trying to tarnish her name endlessly just to cover up “alcohol.”
With those words, Sasha made it clear — she is done protecting, done hiding, and done keeping quiet.
This saga has officially entered nuclear mode.
Both sides are accusing each other of violence, betrayal, manipulation, and destruction.
Both insist they have evidence.
Both are fighting not just for public perception — but for the future of their children.
And Uganda?
Uganda is watching every twist like a blockbuster series.






