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Southern Uganda was probably colonized by Bantu speakers by the end of the first millennium. By the fifteenth or sixteenth century, they had established centralized kingdoms, and by the time the country gained independence from British occupation in 1962, about two-thirds of the people were Bantu speakers. They fall into one of two categories: Bantu of the Eastern or Western Lacustrine. The Baganda, whose primary language is Luganda, the Basoga, as well as other smaller societies in Uganda, Tanzania, and Kenya, are among the Eastern Lacustrine Bantu speakers. The Banyoro, Bastoro, Banyankole, and several other smaller communities in Uganda are Western Lacustrine Bantu speakers.