The older I grow, the more I cringe at the thought of
spending a thousand dollars to buy a phone, an iPhone to be precise.
That is what the one I covet costs in Kampala and I am not about to
borrow that amount for it. But now I won’t have to. Someone is going to
provide.
In 1996, as we were celebrating 10 years of the liberation from
dictatorship and anarchy led by Yoweri Museveni, a highly respectable
man threw a spanner in the works.
Dr Paul Ssemogerere, the man it is widely believed won the 1980
elections but was cheated of victory, declared that he was going to
stand for president against our earthly saviour. It was a tough choice
for voters, between Mr Clean and Mr Liberator. Ssemogerere promised
universal primary education (UPE). Museveni who was the incumbent,
simply declared the UPE.
In 2001, a man who had worked as Museveni’s personal doctor, had
been minister of state for internal affairs as well as a national
political commissar who organised so far the only 100 per cent credible
election to the national legislature in 1989, declared he was
challenging his boss for president.
Dr Kizza Besigye was coming from deep inside and was bound to be
a stronger challenger to Museveni than even Ssemogerere had been. Among
other things, Besigye castigated graduated tax (GT), a colonial per
head tax every male over the age of 18 had to pay every year or face
three months’ imprisonment. After Museveni won the elections, abolition
of the tax was supported by all Members of Parliament and so it went.
Dr Besigye fled to exile in South Africa, but returned to Uganda
in 2005 and declared he was challenging Museveni again the 2006
elections. It was the nastiest of presidential campaigns, one every
adult Ugandan would rather forget.
The Electoral Commission courageously nominated Besigye in
absentia since he was in prison on rape and treason charges. The day it
arrested Besigye, the government declared universal secondary education
(USE), leaving editors to figure out which was the bigger news.
In 2011, Besigye declared he would never seek election or legal
redress under the current set-up, so it looked like the end of strong
presidential challenges to Comrade Museveni. Until the Mbabazi affair.
Suffice it to say Amama Mbabazi comes from deeper in the
Museveni circle than even Besigye. Mbabazi and Museveni started plotting
together against Idi Amin (a name from history books for majority of
today’s voters) while Besigye was a teenager. When Museveni was in the
bush from 1981 to 1986, Mbabazi was doing the external co-ordination
from Nairobi. He automatically became the chief of external intelligence
when they took power in 1986.
Later, he held several powerful ministerial positions, becoming
the first full minister of defence under Museveni, a portfolio the
president had held until it became constitutionally untenable.
Now, Amama wants Museveni’s job. After getting UPE from the
Ssemogerere’s challenge and USE and GT abolition from Besigye’s, we can
only expect UUE (universal university education) from Amama’s threat.
And for us aged fellows who cannot enlist (again) as freshmen at campus,
I am confident it will be free WiFi and iPhones!
Long live Yoweri Museveni!
Joachim Buwembo is a Knight International Fellow for development journalism. E-mail: buwembo@gmail.com
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