2016 Elections; Throw out Museveni, Save Uganda from Total Collapse
by
Valerian Kkonde
PEARL NEWS SERVICE
On February 18, 2016 Uganda will be
going to the polls but on her feet bleeding as a result of Museveni’s 30-year
rule that has devastated the people’s very existence, institutions, morals, pride
and sense of direction.
For president Museveni, so much has been
achieved that no other mortal- being can afford to take over from where he has
stopped; meaning that he alone is capable of being president of Uganda. That is
how Museveni justifies his life-presidency dreams, by brutally clinging to
power even if it means bringing Uganda down with him.
A critical analysis of the state of
Uganda under Museveni’s rule reveals exactly that: institutionalized robbery of
public funds and resources, complete institutional breakdown, state-sponsored
terror, rotten health and educational systems, widespread injustices, hatred,
selfishness and deep seated treachery to point out but a few. Uganda, no doubt,
is on edge and surviving by accident.
But the more Museveni struggles, albeit
unsuccessfully, to justify his dictatorship, systematic failure to deliver and to
cover up his allergy to political competition, the more he is undressed naked.
His only weapon is that he does not feel ashamed. Museveni is given to
retaliating with brutish force, desperate to further cover up his garbage
hoping the truth will not surface.
As Museveni desperately traverses every
corner of the country to garner support for his continued stay in the
presidency, the rotten health system, poverty, jungle law, robbery of public
funds and resources are staring him in the face. At least four districts are
grappling with cholera and the health facilities lack the basics like gloves to
handle this challenge! After thirty years as president! The stupid excuse that
hospitals are in a bad shape because concentration has all along been on family
health was miserably torn apart.
After Dr. Kizza Besigye, one of the
presidential candidates visited Abim district hospital and found it in
shambles; government has instead found it wise to deploy police to bar
opposition presidential candidates from visiting the other equally neglected health
facilities. Hope ministry of health, Electoral Commission and police will come
out to tell the country the number of lives saved following the deployment.
For sure truth cannot be suppressed for
good; as the hunt for votes intensifies, a man did the abominable by trying to
operate his expectant wife from home! He had failed to get help from the nearby
health facility. The mother and baby could not survive this rudimentary attempt
at fixing the health system stinking from thirty years of neglect.
In Karamoja where his wife Janet Kataha
is minister, people are dying of hunger. And soon they will be dying of anger.
The president had spared no energy in justifying the appointment of his wife to
the ministerial post claiming she alone could handle Karamoja region. The
praises heaped on Janet “for transforming Karamoja” remain mere rhetoric devoid
of substance. The roads are so impassable that the trucks that try to take the
desperately needed food spend weeks on the way praying for the dry weather.
The Presidential Elections Act of 2005,
Section 26, states that it is an offence to interfere with the electioneering
activities of any presidential candidate, directly or indirectly. President
Museveni’s supporters have made it a habit to provoke other candidates’ supporters
at the venues for their rallies. On December 13, 2015 Amama Mbabazi’s
supporters severely beat up Museveni’s supporters who were provoking at their
rally in Ntumgamo. The Inspector General of Police (IGP) flew in a helicopter
to evacuate Museveni’s supporters and take them to Mbarara hospital for better
treatment.
The interesting bit is that police for
the first time used the helicopter to take people, who pass for trouble causers
and criminals, to get better treatment. Uganda
roads are a real slaughter house. The practice is to dump the accident victims
on the Police pick ups and later dump them in Mulago hospital. No ambulances
ever appear on such occasions.
Engineer Badru Kiggundu, Chairman of the
INDEPENDENT Electoral Commission, has never come out to condemn these
provocations. Like the Police Force, Kiggundu is ever on the look out for
mistakes by the Opposition and then trumpets that. Kiggundu’s case is
understandable: the Supreme Court declared him incompetent and unfit for that position.
Incompetence is a hallmark of Ugandan
institutions under Museveni’s rule. After the greatest dehumanization of the
people of Northern Uganda by subjecting them to filthy Internally Displaced
Persons (IDPs) camps for over twenty years, the money meant for their
rehabilitation and resuscitation was stolen with the attitude of what will you
do. It was a cruel statement of: you do not deserve this either.
The Permanent Secretary (PS) is the
accounting officer of the Ministry. This means that Pius Bigirimana was the
very first suspect and culprit in all this but he was never charged, not even
mentioned in this scam that rocked the Prime Minister’s Office. But after
sacrificing poor Kazinda, president Museveni resorted to the Consolidated Fund
to further cover up the scam by refunding the stolen billions to the donors
agitating for accountability and threatening sanctions.
But how can Bigirimana, the accounting
officer, again be the whistleblower? This can only happen if he is an
accomplice or a good for nothing lot. For Museveni, Ugandans are too dense to
comprehend this and therefore he is qualified to rule for life.
If there is another custodian, after the
victims themselves, of the atrocities committed against the people in Northern
Uganda by the Lord’s Resistance Army (LRA) rebels and the government soldiers,
then it is Human Rights Watch. Human rights Watch made periodical reports about
the dehumanizing treatment of the people in the North which ably indicate that
the rebels and government all have a case to answer.
President Museveni added insult to
humiliation by refusing to honour the people’s desire to have Dominic Ongwen,
the former LRA rebel commander, subjected to their cultural rituals and be
welcomed back into society. Museveni insisted that Ongwen be sent to the
International Criminal Court “to face justice.”
Up to now, the people maintain that what
is most important to them is burying the hatchet and move on. They continue to
look at the capture of Dominic Ongwen as an opportunity to build bridges of
peace, forgiveness, love and mercy. They do not want to be enslaved by the over
two decades of atrocities meted out on them.
But even if government does not apologise for turning against its own
people, the people deep in their hearts know that indeed it savagely preyed on
them.
It seems the only hope of having a
meaningful reconstruction of Northern Uganda will be during the post Museveni
era. But for the people of Northern Uganda to realise this, they have to use
the ballot to state categorically that they have had enough of Museveni’s
insults and humiliations and that it is
time for some one else to help them realise their dreams of moving on.
In Buganda the cause for jubilation
during the campaign trail has so far been Court’s declaration that government
had no justified power to bar the Kabaka, Ronald Muwenda Mutebi II, from
visiting his County of Bugerere.
Buganda played a pivotal role in bringing
Museveni to power in 1986; it virtually sacrificed its very self but it has as
well paid the heaviest price under Museveni’s rule. The generally held view is
that Museveni had, and has indeed implemented it, a well crafted plan to
destroy Buganda. The Sabanyala and Sabaluli are all makings of Museveni to
weaken and destroy Buganda’s unity, cohesion, development and dominance.
Luweero was Buganda’s economic power
base and Museveni used it as his base for the five-year bloody guerrilla war
that brought him to state power. He deliberately refused to reconstruct it
despite the billions of shillings purportedly spent in the guise of putting the
area back on its feet.
Government continues to strangle Buganda
economically by underfunding areas like agriculture which are crucial to
resuscitating its economic power. The over twenty billion shillings government
owes Buganda in rent arrears is not forthcoming while billions continue to
disappear under dubious donations and repayments to companies belonging to the
regime’s cronies.
Worse still, Buganda’s forest cover,
wetlands and other water bodies are being destroyed at an alarming rate not
witnessed in any other part of the country. Mabira tropical forest reserve, L.
Victoria, River Ssezibwa, Lubigi swamp and Bujuuko forest have not been spared, to
mention a few.
Fortunately Buganda has not yet lost her
fighting spirit even though some elders grow old without growing in wisdom. The
earlier Buganda mobilised her subjects to vote for a regime change the better
for her and the country at large.
After the granaries disappeared from
Eastern Uganda, the region became the granary for poverty in Uganda. Jinja town
is, under Museveni, the ghost of the industrial heart of the country that it
used to be. If one wants to see the effects of thirty years of Museveni’s rule then
Jinja is the town to visit. The thousands of bicycles would have been a beauty
if they were transporting people to work in the industries and factories; but
they spend the day searching for passengers and that turns them into a curse.
Shops along the sleepy main street are
stocked with sweet bananas and sisal ropes! And there is no electricity which
is generated a stone throw away! Thirty years of oppressive and suppressive
rule can be destructive more so if leaders at the different levels are equally
selfish, short sighted and are the type of backyard characters.
These backyard characters, that have
nothing to lose, have compounded Uganda’s demise as they battle with their past
and want to prove to everyone that they have reached.
There can be no other reason- other than
this- why the East which has very fertile soils and grows cash crops like
groundnuts, maize, tobacco, sim-sim, sorghum, oranges and mangoes should wallow
in abject poverty to the extent of being home to primitive age illnesses like
jiggers. What a shame for a man who has been president for thirty years to hunger
for recognition as the one who helped broker
the election of the traditional leader- the Kyabazinga! But what are you doing
about the abject poverty and school drop out?
Cultural leaders, worth their status,
are all confounded by the levels of poverty and unemployment among their
people. Government that squeezes the last shilling from them, in the guise of
taxation, long transformed into a leach! It no longer overseas the national
funds and resources on their behalf; it is preoccupied with enriching family
members and cronies.
Learning about the oil deposits in the
Western region, goons used their close ties with government and embarked on a
land-grabbing spree turning ordinary folk into refugees in their own country.
On many occasions, Museveni has got the guts to publicly declare that the oil
is his! It is no longer a question as to whether or not the treasure is a
curse; indeed it is, long before the actual exploration has kicked off. Libya’s
former strongman, the late Muamar Ghadaffi had also turned the country’s oil
into his personal property. Museveni should consult him on where he left it
all.
As the agreements are being signed under
the cover of darkness, the wetlands, forests, wildlife and natural water bodies
are destined for extinction.
President Museveni has also selfishly
and dangerously pitted the West against the rest of the country. With 90% of
government positions, as well as key institutions, in the firm grip of people
from Western Uganda, the region is looked at with anger and hatred.
Each region has had its unique share of
the tribulations of Museveni’s thirty-year dictatorship but some issues are so
similar that they are a uniting factor in the search for a new beginning.
Consider the rotten health system, the lack of meaningful employment, the
institutional failure and the environmental degradation. All regions are
yearning for a change of government so as to have hope in the future.
Like wise, all the regions have
witnessed and tasted the land-grabbing spree which has turned thousands of
Ugandans into refugees in their own country. To the contrary, refugees have
become the de facto owners of Uganda.
The harmony that once existed among
different communities has become so poisoned that it looks almost impossible
for those relationships to be restored. It will require a trusted, charismatic
leader to get Uganda stand again as one country pursuing the dignity, progress
and happiness of all irrespective of ethnicity, political affiliation or
background.
The February 2016 elections are taking
place 71 days after Pope Francis visited Uganda. The Pope, in all his messages
at Entebe state house, Munyonyo and Namugongo Martyrs’ shrines, Kololo
airstrip, Nalukolongo Charity home and Lubaga Cathedral, kept urging Ugandans
to work for the good of others.
The Pope’s visit was necessitated by,
among other reasons, the Golden jubilee celebrations of the Canonisation of the
22 Catholic Uganda Martyrs. These Martyrs were at the fore front of fighting
dictatorship and bad governance which are key impediments to the service of God.
They used their own blood.
When Museveni was waging the five-year
bloody guerrilla war, he claimed to be fighting bad governance, dictatorship,
oppression and other vices that are of the same feather with lust for power.
Museveni has proved a total flop at this and is far worse than any of the previous
leaders he fondly refers to as pigs. After thirty uninterrupted years at the
helm, Museveni cannot have any genuine excuse for the dismal performance.
Museveni’s rhetoric has been put to test and
found devoid of substance. While he is a lucky man; not many ever get all those
years, all the excuses he tries to bring forward simply betray him exposing his
hypocrisy and non performance.
On February 18, 2016 Ugandans should
emulate the Martyrs in fighting dictatorship and bad governance by casting
their vote against Museveni. It is time to elect leaders who not only talk but
act justice and peace, rule of law and order, fairness, trust and integrity so
that the country embarks on a journey that will bring about sustainable peace
and development for all Ugandans. The old man has failed to make the decision
to quit himself; Ugandans should take it for him. This will help restore hope
in the populace and save the country from total collapse.
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