<P> The Buganda Agreement (alternatively the Uganda Agreement or Treaty of Mengo) of March 1900 formalised the relationship between the Kingdom of Buganda and the British Uganda Protectorate . </P> <P> The agreement was negotiated by Alfred Tucker, Bishop of Uganda, and signed by, among others, Buganda's Katikiro Sir Apolo Kagwa, on the behalf of the Kabaka (Daudi Chwa) who was at that time an infant, and Sir Harry Johnston on the behalf of the British colonial government . </P> <P> Buganda would henceforth be a province of the Protectorate, and would be transformed into a constitutional monarchy with the power of the Lukiiko (advisory council) greatly enhanced and the role of the Kabaka (king) reduced . The British also gained the right to veto future choices of Kabaka, and control of numerous other appointments . These provisions concerning the roles of the Kabaka and Lukiiko were largely reversed by the Buganda Agreement of 1961 . </P>

Who signed the 1900 buganda agreement on behalf of buganda