President Jakaya Kikwete (centre) with presidents Uhuru Kenyatta (third
right) of Kenya and Yoweri Museveni (second right) of Uganda and (from
left) Zanzibar Second Vice President Seif Ali Idd, Rwandan Prime
Minister Pierre Damien Habumuremyi and Burundian First Vice President
Prosper Bazombaza unveil the East African Court of Justice guidebook
during the 12th Extraordinary Summit of EAC Heads of State in Arusha
April 30, 2014. PHOTO | FILBERT RWEYEMAMU
By GAAKI KIGAMBO Special Correspondent
In Summary
- Instability in South Sudan was likely to energise Joseph Kony’s Lord Resistance Army. There have been fears in Kampala about the re-emergence of rebellion following the falling out last year between President Museveni and former co-ordinator of intelligence services Gen. David
President Yoweri Museveni’s office has moved to
explain why Uganda sent its troop to South Sudan even as pressure
intensifies for their withdrawal.
Instability in South Sudan was likely to energise
Joseph Kony’s Lord Resistance Army. There have been fears in Kampala
about the re-emergence of rebellion following the falling out last year
between President Museveni and former co-ordinator of intelligence
services Gen. David Sejusa.
“Joseph Kony was a straggler after the defeat of
Alice Lakwena and her Holy Spirit Movement. It was the revolt within the
SPLA/M that linked up Kony firmly with Juba and Khartoum,” said David
K. Mafabi, President Museveni’s private secretary.
Moreover, he said, President Museveni’s strong
pan-African ideals and the need to safeguard his country’s economic
interests underlie his decision to send troop to South Sudan.
South Sudan has emerged as the single biggest
trading partner. Exports there are valued at $220 million per month,
according to the Bank of Uganda. The two-month conflict partly explains
the nearly $100 million shortfall Uganda Revenue Authority recorded in
its half-year performance.
ALSO READ: Regional interests shaping South Sudan war
With ever present threats of foreign aid being
frozen, the government is trying to raise its own internal revenues.
Last year, the Finance Ministry committed to financing 81.1 per cent of
the national budget from internally generated revenues. Instability in
its leading market, therefore, called for immediate intervention.
These factors remain in operation despite
Kampala’s recent announcement of an imminent withdrawal of its soldiers
from Juba. At the 4th Northern Corridor Integration Projects Summit that
Kampala hosted on February 20, Dr Barnaba Marial Benjamin, South
Sudan’s Minister for Foreign Affairs, paid glowing tribute to Uganda’s
intervention and appeared to challenge other regional countries to
emulate it.
“I would like to take this opportunity to thank
foreign ministers of the Inter-Governmental Authority on Development
(Igad) who responded positively and also to President Uhuru Kenyatta as
well as Ethiopian Prime Minister Hailemariam Desalegn who actually flew
in withing four days of the crisis. Where would they have found the
confidence if Ugandan troops were not at Juba Airport? Would these
countries have allowed their president and prime minister to fly into
crossfire? It wouldn’t happen,” Dr Barnaba told the summit.
According to Simon Mulongo, a security expert,
whereas the summit was officially about infrastructure development,
President Museveni may have timed it to “seek a rethink by these
countries about using their weight as the East African Community to
influence events in Igad so that they do not disfavour Uganda’s
interests.”
President Museveni and his close associates seem
to have never got over Dr Riek Machar’s splintering of the Sudan
People’s Liberation Army/Movement in 1991 and his subsequent alliance
with Sudan’s President Omar al-Bashir.
This marriage gave Kony the lifeline upon which he
founded the Lord’s Resistance Army and for the next 15 years wreaked
havoc in north and parts of eastern Uganda.
“Khartoum, working together with Riek Machar,
retrained, rearmed, and reorganised Kony first and foremost not to fight
Uganda but to fight against the SPLA/M. Riek Machar has never severed
his links with the LRA from that time up to today,” added Mr Mafabi, a
onetime aide to the late Dr John Garang, the founding leader of the
SPLA/M.
Dr Machar was, until July last year, President
Salva Kiir’s deputy before he was sacked. He led the 2006 peace
negotiations between the Ugandan government and Kony, who never turned
up to sign the final agreement.
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