Uganda’s Clueless Parliament; President Museveni is the Problem
by
Valerian Kkonde
PEARL NEWS SERVICE
Rt. Hon. Rebecca Alitwala Kadaga the Speaker of Parliament. It is up to her to protect the integrity of Parliament or let it to be a laughing stock. |
If the greed, arrogance and
insensitiveness being displayed by Uganda’s tenth Parliament sends shivers down
your spine, then it could mean two things. Either you are new to Uganda, or for
the last thirty years you have been disinterested in the affairs of this
country. Otherwise, what Parliament is going through is exactly what
power-hungry Museveni has subjected all the other institutions to.
During
his regime, President Museveni has put more effort in undermining institutions
and replacing them with himself than ensuring they fulfill their constitutional
mandate of serving the common good. This is the main reason why Uganda has stagnated,
in all sectors, and taken to backtracking when it comes to sustainable peace
and development.
Uganda’s Parliament, the third arm of
government, is a mockery of good governance. First the numbers are outrageous!
Second its composition reduces it to a club of gamblers, opportunists and
lumpens. Any semblance of legislation has deliberately been dashed as the so
called honourables have been reduced to fortune seekers who cannot even tell
whether the people they claim to represent have the basic necessities, go to
bed on empty stomachs or have a say in the governance of the country.
For Museveni, the more Parliament is
disgraced, the better for him; a Parliament that gives hope to Ugandans, calls
him to order, challenges his decisions and lives up to its expectations is what
he can not tolerate around.
At the time of grumbling for the
shillings 150 million to buy themselves vehicles, a number of private
initiatives were being undertaken to bring to an end the perishing of Ugandans
in hopeless and avoidable road accidents.
Nkozi hospital, founded by missionaries
75 years ago, is one such undertaking. Situated along the notorious
Kampala-Masaka accident snare, the hospital has been overwhelmed by the numbers
of accident victims they attend to on a daily basis.
Managed by Sisters of the Immaculate
Heart of Mary Reparatrix- Ggogonya, this is one of the very few hospitals in
Uganda visited by patients with hope that they will be attended to and even get
better. The vast majority, including Mulago National Referral Hospital, have
been turned into places where patients converge to lament, groan and kick the
bucket. That is the legacy of the power -hungry Museveni.
“We are searching left and right to
raise funds for the Accident and Emergency Ward to save lives of at least 15
victims of road accidents a week,” the hospital management pleads.
Unfortunately, Parliament which was
supposed to Legislate, play the oversight role and advise the Executive is
preoccupied with grabbing the tax-payer’s money as if it is the vehicles that
voted for them. The best interpretation of this avarice is that they no longer
need nor care about the well being of the voters.
This initiative is being spearheaded by
His Eminence Emmanuel Cardinal Wamala and the Buganda prince David Kintu
Wassajja. The hospital requires at least 650 million for the emergency ward.
Disgustingly the 431 MPs have as well been allocated 68 million shillings each
as cover for their funeral! Uganda has indeed gone to the dogs. Such sickening Parliaments
can only be found in countries with demagogues for leaders. They are the mirror
of the rulers, one does not need to look elsewhere to tell the caliber of those
wielding power.
From the peanuts that the doctors and
teachers are paid, they are able to save and buy themselves cars, meet the
medical expenses for their families and take care of their funeral arrangements.
What is so special about Uganda’s MPs who have to squeeze the tax payers to
live extravagantly? They are doing all this in the name of and to the well being
of Museveni.
President Museveni, who has been in
power for the last 30 years after a five-year bloody guerrilla war, spared
nothing to grab state power. He is doing exactly the same to cling to it.
Museveni always positions his lumpens to
take care of his selfish, primitive and destructive interests. Usually it is
the newly rich, with nothing to lose. Because he sees no future outside State
House, this time round he is targeting Parliament so that he can console his
ego that he got a legal mandate to cling to power by getting it to remove the
75 year ceiling for one to be president.
President Museveni’s evil desire to turn
this 10th Parliament into his rubber stamp was at display when the
so called legislators were electing the House Speaker and the Deputy. He
literally supervised the House to ensure that his “faithful servant” Jacob
Oulanyah was elected Deputy Speaker.
During the 9th Parliament,
Rebecca Kadaga was the Speaker and Oulanyah the Deputy. In the 10th
Parliament, Kadaga wanted to keep her post and Oulanyah came out openly to
challenge her. They both got the National Resistance Movement (NRM) blessing to
contest for the Parliamentary Speakership!
The short-lived tag of war helped
further bring to the surface the selfish interests within the NRM Party as well
as between the two contestants. Seeing that he had no chance, whatsoever,
against the elderly Kadaga, Oulanyah decided to go for the less stressing
Deputy Speaker spot.
Although the Ministry for Finance,
Planning and Economic Development warned against the continued creation of
districts that cannot sustain themselves, Museveni has made it a hobby to
create as many districts as possible. Never mind that his reasoning has long
been trashed by experts that numerous districts do not help bring services
closer to the people.
Majority of districts do not even
receive enough funds from the central government to enable them meet the
expectations of their residents. They only exist to satisfy the ego of those
seeking cheap popularity and wanting to be praised as the author of this and
that, no matter the catastrophic consequences.
Africa’s curse of demagogues who cling
to power is characterised by one similar factor; they all are impostors and
none performers. Zimbabwe’s Robert Mugabe failed even to sustain the systems
and developments he succeeded from the colonial masters he likes to demonise.
Museveni keeps reminding everyone that
he is a freedom fighter but the “freedom” he claims to have fought for
continues to force the country’s most productive force to flee the country for
slavery in the Arab world. Like Mugabe, he has for the last thirty years failed
to fix the ailing and sickening health system. He has even failed to maintain
it to the standards those he calls pigs had raised it to.
The trivializing of Parliament is
exactly what befell the Judiciary, Police and other public institutions. They
have all been reduced to serving Museveni’s interests and preoccupied with
maintaining him in power.
In areas where the Opposition won the
leadership positions, Museveni is preoccupied with undermining their service
delivery efforts. The aim is to discredit them before their electorate and
supporters and undermine all attempts at proving that they are alternative
leaders.
The demise of the capital Kampala is a
result of the city being an Opposition stronghold. Primitive and uncouth
measures have been employed to undermine the Opposition leadership but to
Museveni’s chagrin everything is backfiring. Frustrated and hurt, Museveni has
decided to splash money around, undermine rule of law advocated by the
Opposition and try to show that he is a friendly person especially to the
majority he has impoverished through oppressive economic policies that favour
his cronies.
But these impoverished peasants have
proved that they have identified him as the problem and the reason why they
have become refugees in their own country. The crime they committed is not to
vote the old man with a hat!
Another legacy of Museveni’s brutal
regime is the mass displacement and expulsion of people from their ancestral
homes, many times with the support of the Police and government officials. This
kind of political torture is an initiative of Museveni and has its background
in the guerrilla war that helped him grab state power. In colonial times, mass
displacements were a measure to contain plagues. Museveni is using them to
force compliance and reward accomplices.
Museveni has become this desperate out
of his own choice. May be out of greed is a better word. Thirty years is too
long a period not to be put to the benefit of the majority. What genuine excuse
can Museveni bring forward if not selfishness, greed, non performance and may be
accumulated fatigue!
Museveni’s respect for rule of law is
mere lip service. That is why he is more concerned with undermining
institutions than empowering them to fulfill their constitutional obligations.
Any law enacted under Museveni must be serving his interests and oppressing
political opponents; that is the spirit of the laws in the last thirty years.
Religious denominations are also
writhing under Museveni’s greed for power. So are the cultural institutions.
The emergence of the Old Kampala and Kibuli sects is a result of Museveni’s
disrespect and dislike for the rule of law. And he wants to be adored as he
pretends to know everything. But because the Mr. Know-it-all has not helped
Uganda become better, it follows that he is a pretender.
Muslims have the capacity to resolve
their misunderstandings but Museveni, using the state machinery, imposed thugs
on them leading to the splinter sects. Thugs who will fail to amass their
ill-gotten wealth under Museveni will have themselves to blame. This regime is
a one in a life time.
The envy and hatred for Buganda is so
vivid that only opportunists can come up and defend these assaults on the
foundation, heart and pace setter of Uganda. The emergence of the Baker Kimezes
and the Ssabanyalas are clearly calculated to cripple Buganda and pamper
Museveni’s wounded ego. Museveni has become notorious for dishing out suspicious
financial bailouts but he will never find the money to pay Buganda’s rent
arrears.
The Museveni who hates, envies and loves
undermining the authority of other leaders continues to show unprecedented
hatred for those intending to have a go at the presidency of the country. Museveni’s
insistence that the death penalty should stay seems to be driven by that
ill-feeling toward those who have shown more leadership potential than him.
On a number of occasions, Museveni has
masterminded the fabrication of capital cases against his political nemesis,
Dr. Kizza Besigye. It is clear that the intention is to have Besigye convicted
of these trumped up charges and thus gets rid of him under the pretext of the
law.
The dictators who deliberately undermine
institutions and institute themselves as the alpha and omega have always
personally reaped the fruits of their brutal reign. For some, tragedy strikes
with savage vengeance to include wives, children, grandchildren and even great
grand children.
A number of factors have combined to
turn Uganda into total hell. These include: the ailing economy, months of
unpaid salaries, the hostile climate leading to 90% of crop failure and a
precarious health sector. Others are: continued robbery of public funds and
resources, a bloated human rights record especially on the part of the
Opposition and its supporters and the impunity of security agencies to name but
a few.
Parliament has failed to handle any of
them, conclusively, to help the country start afresh and move on in a manner
that is predictable, peaceful and hinged on the foundation of rule of law and
justice. This aloof Parliament continues to snore and scramble for every
shilling dangled before it forgetting that instilling hope is a crucial part of
nation-building.
Advocates of good governance put in
place institutions to streamline the management of society, resolve
satisfactorily political, social and economic disputes and take care of the
interests of every member of society no matter his or her political affiliation,
race or religion. The mad men who hijack this process not only distort nations
but they as well become a problem that has to be got rid of with disastrous
implications.
It is without doubt that Uganda has a number
of problems but the actual problem is Museveni. Museveni is such a problem that
climate change, malaria, robbery of public funds and resources, an over crowded
and clueless Parliament become so insignificant. Until the Museveni problem is
solved, once and for all, sustainable peace and development will remain mere
dreams incessantly evaporating before us like steam.
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