People, voters
particularly, have generally complained about politicians who make nice
promises, get votes, and never meet the promises made, they repeat the
routine at the next election cycle and probably, some get re-elected.
Using
colourful language, academic Stella Nyanzi has focussed public
attention on the spurious ways of politicians, her well-chosen target is
Mr Yoweri Museveni.
She is in
prison, a situation that keeps the spotlight on her challenge of
President Museveni on a specific campaign promise he made: “When our
daughters are in monthly periods, some parents don’t know how to help
them. We are now going to provide free sanitary pads for our daughters.”
President
Museveni made that promise, as reported by the New Vision, at a
campaign rally at Alira Primary School in Akura Sub–county, Alebtong
District, on Thursday, November 12, 2015.
Mr
Museveni was re-elected, one could argue, partly because of bold and
sensible promises such as provision of sanitary towels to keep Uganda’s
girls in school.
Daily Monitor quoted
the President to have said, “I want all our daughters to attend school
and remain there until they complete their studies. One of the reasons
that force our daughters out of school is that when their periods start,
they do not have sanitary pads. When they are in class, they soil their
dresses. So they run away from school.”
In
making the promise, Mr Museveni knew it would resonate with parents,
who are the voters, besides, many girl-child rights and education
activists had lobbied for this sort of undertaking for years.
Then the bombshell came in February
2017. The government announced it has no money to provide the sanitary
kits girls need to maintain good menstrual hygiene and stay in school.
So, was Mr Museveni being a cynical politician, making a big promise he knew to be empty but was a sure vote getter?
Did presidential candidate Museveni make the big promise without a clue how it would be fulfilled or funded?
Did
President Museveni make the big promise knowing fully well it was too
expensive to meet, and that when the time came he would simply own up,
Ugandans would forgive, forget and move on like they have done on
several issues before?
Dr Nyanzi
refused to forget and move on. She took to social media to directly
challenge the President and his government for failing to keep a promise
made in “broad daylight"
Mr
Museveni, well, this moment has long been on the way. A number of things
— empty promises and botched implementation of promises met — have
converged to make life a little uncomfortable up there.
Ahead
of the 1996 elections, Mr Museveni promised UPE, it came in 1997. Ahead
of the 2006 elections, he scrapped graduated tax, in the midst of it
all, he was creating as many districts as was humanly possible even as
observers were saying the new administrative entities were costly empty
shells.
He also constantly, with the
able help of Hajj Abdul Nadduli, begged Ugandans to make many babies,
they obliged Of course, a sizeable number of those babies would one day
need education, health, sanitary towels, name it and so the 2016
campaign season brought us the sanitary towel promise.
These
programmes and policy moves are costly and yet are of the sort that it
is politically suicidal for anyone to cancel or shrink them. No
politician is going to scrap UPE (or go back to the original plan of
educating only four children per family) and no politician will
amalgamate the splintered districts.
Broke
or not, the government has to keep paying for these things. They are
what Americans call entitlements. Ugandans have come to expect, and
indeed live with, them as a matter of right.
If
you start giving poor girls sanitary pads, you will never stop because
Uganda is not about to run out of poor menstruating girls. This was
another entitlement on its way. Once this fact hit, Mr Museveni had to
hit the escape button (and Dr Nyanzi hit the pause one). Maybe he should
have done a better job explaining what on earth was going on instead of
the simple, even though honest, declaration that the government has no
money to keep its girls in school.
Regardless,
Mr Museveni and other politicians may think twice before making
promises that are not thought through, that are not backed up by a plan
of fulfilment once they have pocketed the votes.
No comments:
Post a Comment