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- May 25, 2016 at 3:10 pm #1430
Here is a real catch 22 for the dictatorship. How to deal with Nsereko upon the backdrop of the deputy speakership of parliament.
1. One option would be for the dictator to use the method of hostility and to try to crush and silence him. But this would be a hilly path for M7. Experience should show that this is what he tried to use against Besigye but it was counterproductive as it afforded Besigye a lot of limelight and actually made him a big brand.
2. Another option would be to drop the stick and hold the carrot….Appease Nsereko. Fob him off with a cabinet post. But this would send a negative message to the other party members: that defying the dictator is the only way to the “promised land”. That gesture would bring forth many rebel MPs and the dictator already has his hands too full to afford the luxury of creating new rebel MPs
3. The dictator can just ignore Nsereko and adopt a “live and let live” policy. But that too would be a grave mistake. Nserekp has shown that he has the strength to influence members from both sides of Parliament. To leave him criticizing the dictatorship can greatly affect it. For starters, Nsereko was nominated by an NRM MP in the over bearing presence of the dictator and garnered more than the sum of opposition and independent MPs in the house. He ate in NRM votes. You cant ignore such a force.
Faced with such a situation M7 needs the best political mathematicians around him. But the last time i checked, these were more loyal to Mbabazi than to him………May 25, 2016 at 3:12 pm #1431WHAT THIS 10TH MUST DO FOR A STABLE UGANDA
i) Restore Presidential term limit unconditionally
ii) Pass a bill that has a platform for national reconciliation
iii) Introduce a bill and pass it as an act of Parliament to protect and not prosecute former presidents and there family members unconditionally, this will create conducive environment for seating Presidents to retire willingly
iv)Create more political space for all political parties to rich grassroot for mobilization in preparation for the next general elections
iv)Create a more independent electoral commission where all political parties have a hand
v)To ensure the current President serves his last termMay 25, 2016 at 3:18 pm #1432Politics of Naiveness.
When I hear Opposition Politicians assuring Ugandans that No bill in favour of Museveni will pass through this
Parliament. Sometimes I wonder if something is wrong with my ears. It’s called false confidence, in a poverty tricken Parliament, even if Dr.Kizza Besigye is the Speaker and Erias Lukwago is the Deputy, every bill that Gen. Museveni wants will sail through the 10th Parliament.
I interact with MP’s privately, I know what they think, how they feel and the financial burden they are carrying from the Electrorate. Politicians that built Uganda were volunteers. Basically they were doing Voluntary work for Uganda but the current breed of Politicians I see and mingle with, they are in a private sector. Basically they are in business.
They will go for anyone who is willing to pay them and no one will tell you lie that this so called Opposition Leaders truly represent the suffering of Ugandans. To me they represent their families.
They is nothing that Gen. Museveni wants that won’t go through this Parliament, he has the money, he has the Military and now he controls the media.
Let’s look at the figures, NRM has over 300 MP’S , the opposition has only 56 MP’S and all independent MP’S are
leaning to NRM and the 10 UPDF MP’S. Before you can comment on this post, who is your area MP and what is on his CV apart from his birth certificate, PLE, 0 and A Level Certificate. What was his bank statement before he stood as an MP?May 25, 2016 at 3:20 pm #1433ANOTHER STRATEGIC POLITICAL VIEW ON THE DIMENSION OF THE NRM REVOLUTION FOR UGANDA:
Many in the Ugandan political opposition and beyond, don’t seem to understand that the NRM revolution is bigger than the trivial party inclinations and differences they manifest.Uganda’s political terrain and horizon were shaped by the General/President Yoweri Kaguta Museveni led mission and vision all the way, and climaxed in 1986.
Since then the Ugandan political dynamics have revolved around that aspect of the revolution.
Even the demands for ‘multipartyism’ by the UPC and DP among others as it were years back, besides the agitation of new groups including the FDC, are only limited to the moral functionality of government rather than the basis of its mission.
In fact the NRM revolution is way above political parties going by its broad vision.
On that note, I should like to present for discussion, a fact that even the NRM political Party is too small to be a total integration of the NRM revolutionary ideals. Because the aspirations of the Revolution are bigger than the Party.
The line and operationalization of the NRM revolution must therefore be made distinct. This would save the NRM Party from getting messed up by issues, such as:
– the sustained contradiction of individual merit viz a viz popular democratic empowerment, and ensuring adherence say by NRM M.Ps to Party regulations.
– upholding the revolutionary ideals in the face of opportunism by selfish political actors, in the name of championing multiparty politics.
– pushing for a middle class hinged on a consumer economy embedded in political commitments, yet we are still in a preindustrial setting – with a low export base, the structure and principle of our mission wouldn’t be tenable! Unless we can recover from this by default and or by God’s goodwill.
– vulnerability to subversive elements.
Actually it was unfortunate we switched from the Movement system of government too soon!
CONCLUSION:
Finally, making a distinction between the NRM Party and the Revolution by practice is a necessity for clarity.Consideration to constituting a Historicals’ platform which brings together our elders who were in the revolutionary struggle is very paramount.
Ostracising some of the revolutionary strugglers either by their own opportunistic designs, or by our own internal circumstances, doesn’t remove fact of the need as I have espoused above.
Cadres – young and old, let’s deliberate on this and package something workable in this regard, from a Patriotic perspective.
Surely whether people like Dr. Besigye, Hon. Mbabazi, Gen. Sejjusa, Hon. Jabeli Bidandi Ssali erred or not. It is incumbent upon us to work towards a platform of the elders to the revolution, to engage and guide the younger Cadres on a consolidated future of our journey. Alutta continua.
May 25, 2016 at 3:22 pm #1434ACTION IS BETTER THAN WORDS
KINO KITALONYONYONYO!
this is un fair how can fdc MPs, Councilors sleep in bangaroos, seat on sofasets, sleep on double beds, eat chicken and chips, drive posh cars, dress american suits, put on musonso shoes, take milk and coffe, drink beers and wines, go to vip toilets, enjoy gyms , fresh air, sleep with their beautifull wives , etc While our president dr Kiza Besigye the man who suffered for them , the man who made them what they are, the man who is still fighting for them HE is suffering from Luzira prison?? Eating block posho, enjoying bad smells of luzira, defecating in backets, sleeping on cement, being tortured by inmates and prison wardens dressing yellow uniform and in sandles imagine!! Are you bribed by dictator museven?? You also ate 5millions to sell him?? Are you lame ?? Cant you wake up?? Besigye supporters do something to rescue our president
other wise the country is doomed
wake up fearless young fighters liberate your countryMay 25, 2016 at 3:23 pm #1435BETTER BRAINS HAVE BEEN ELIMINATED SINCE INDEPENDENCE: THE REASON FOR RETROGRESS
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Most of poor Ugandan presidents have always tried to eliminate better Ugandan thinkers in both governments and the opposition.At the beginning of Uganda after independence, we had Benedicto Kiwanuka a great Democrat who was recognized internationally and the last photo he was with former US president John F Kennedy.
He was eliminated in cheap politics of monarchism by dictators who never wanted anyone to outshine them.
The same way was Andrew Lutakome Kayiira eliminated after NRA had captured power in fear of his wisdom and popularity among Ugandans. This has created a huge gap in our politics since the most prominent and experienced Ugandans are eliminated in favour of incompetent leaders who always seek popularity vote with investing in energy and sacrificing for the good of country.
Wapakhabhulo James and others were also eliminated.
Lastly the man who seconded the people’s power in article one of the constitution Noble Mayombo also disappeared in a manner most Ugandans have never known.With the current education systems, the better brains have been left behind for the well to do families and their children.
We need to restore order to get better brains not envying them.
Africa Deserves Better Brains.May 25, 2016 at 3:26 pm #1436Yumbe District’s Security is in Jeopardy: Who Is Doing What To Stabilize or Destabilize The District?
Refer to my earlier posting in West Nile Action Network.
1) That Aringa Voters were lured to vote for Museveni for a Demand which was put forward to Museveni which he promised fulfill when elected. That if they voted Kiiza into the state house their demand was not going to honoured by Kiiza Besigye
2) That has ever been failing to fulfill his promises since started voting for him 3 consecutive times.
3) That Museveni trained armed men in Yumbe and rendered them jobless, which is a potential to security threat.
4) That the conflict between the Gicaras and Gotri is a plot by the government to advance policy of divide and rule.
5)That the Banyarwanda Cattle Keepers are not in good terms over the land. That this could be a stepping stone and excuse for the government to justify massive troop presence.
6)That 2373 members of North Western Proreform Agenda have not been considered by this government.
7) That The so called kidnapping is a government plot to harass the opposition.
8) Another name also surfaced as the mole behind these events.
The Brigade Commander and the LC V Chairman seem to have different perspectives.
I had the opportunity to talk to the Chairman Of North Western Proreform Agenda Mr. Muzamil Musa, who revealed to me how they managed to convince people of Yumbe to vote for Museveni.It may look so simply but Behind Simplicity Lies Complexity.
The Days To Come Will Determine Who Are Stakeholders and Who Are Stick Holders in Addressing This Development. FOR GOD AND MY COUNTRY.May 25, 2016 at 3:28 pm #1437WHO IS A GOOD POLITICIAN?
Dr A.M Obote, President of Republic of Uganda in his address to Parliament’s first meeting, fourth session, Wednesday, 28th March 1984. The assembly met at 2.30 p.m. in Parliament house, Kampala.
“Mr. Speaker, Sir, this young House of politicians has gained considerable experience and has performed fairly well, and Members are climbing on the ladder of political leadership. I would think that individual Members by now know the truism of the first rule of political leadership, which states that one has to be a good politician in order to get a chance to be a statesman. The emphasis is on ‘good politician’. Every politician aspires to be a statesman. The road is not an easy one. Mr. Speaker, a good politician has many attributes:-
• A good politician is one who knows that power lies with the people.
• A good politician is one who knows that power does not lie in Government or Parliament, but with the people.
• A good politician is one who knows that Government and Parliament exercise powers entrusted to them by the people and that the same power must be exercised solely in the interests of the people.
• A good politician is one who respects the will of the people.
• A good politician is one who knows that at an election the electorate has the power either to confirm the current representative or transfer their trust to another representative.
• A good politician is one who works relentlessly for peace, prosperity and goodwill and, as the distinguished American Statesman, Abraham Lincoln once said, works on the principle of “…..Malice towards none and charity to all……”
• A good politician is one who knows that the interest of his country is paramount and all others are secondary.
• A good politician is one who knows that party differences are secondary to national unity and security. (Hear, hear.)’’May 25, 2016 at 3:29 pm #1438Many nrm supporters always cry of Fdc supporters mostly here on facebook and other social media that we are rude, harsh, tough, abusive and insultive to nrm supporters and their president museven, i agree with them and these are the following reasons as to why no NRM supporters, wellwishers and leaders should be spared in this liberation struggle and as to why we hate them .
1. TORTURINGS. Nrm has tortured fdc supporters and leaders to highest level actually beyond imaginations. i once visited kireka the torture chambers of nrm police and i shade endless tears after seeing innocent youn boys being tortured simply because they support fdc things are not easy at kireka others ends up loosing their lives there take avisit and prove by your self.
2. KILLINGS. many fdc supportes have been killed over nothing by kayihuras nrm police oh my God as if they are not ugandans .make research about it.
3. TEARGASS. Alot of fdc supporters have shared this dangerous and expired medicine of Nrm over nothing oh my God
4:ILLIGAL ARRESTS AND DETANTIONS. Try to visit luzira, safe houses, other state prisons allover uganda you will see what iam talking about. The biggest percentage of prisoners are fdc supporters they dont take them to courts but busy suffering, digging, roting and deing from those nrm prisons as if they were not born by human beings kale!
5. Lastly denial of freedom of expression, movements, state jobs and other human rights to fdc supporters and leaders . When we try to seek them they call us thugs, thieves, kifesis, holigans etc etc then you wonder which ctry is this! So how do you expect aperson you have caused all those evil deeds to respect you, honnor you, love you and obey you????
So fdc comrades young fearless fighters, wake up let us liberate our selves from these unhuman acts nrm supportes and leaders have caused to us if not we are all finished! !
Use whatever you have to fight for your freedomMay 25, 2016 at 3:31 pm #1439“Hello friends I wanna share with you My story with those who may be where I have been In a state of looking for jobs.
After dropping out from school I had to face the world looking for the job no one knew me, no one wanna know anything about me, I did different kinds of Jobs, I did security work [securiko] I will never 4get the day I was deployed at Rest pub Namasuba and slept till 8:00am just. On road side. I woke up n ran away I was ashamed I felt dying inside me.
We used to rent a house 6 of us sleeping on one mattress imagine the situation and how we used to sleep.[Horizontal] someone out there you are struggling like me yet you have your papers, you studied but u have been looking for jobs for years just like I was.
Friends one time I met a lady whom I may call my Angel sent from heaven, she told me she could get me a job in the company where she was working, we were not related just a friend that I least expected, I knew she was gonna give me cleaning work since she knew I did not study.To find out she was holding a big office, earning good money in one of big American company she gave me a work that I could not expect, friends its one year down the road, I may not narrate the whole story but my life have changed beyond what I can explain sometimes I don’t believe that am the one too!!!.
Am not where I want to be, but am not where I used to be, I may not afford to help everyone out there but now I can help someone too, I have some few spaces for some few lucky one. If you know anyone that need help whatsup Me we help that person. +256788232346”May 25, 2016 at 3:36 pm #1440Warning! Youth don’t attend the Indoor meetings that Is Held in Big Hotels promising To Employ you… Investors are now becoming thieves. Please President M7 take back your People.
Things in Kigezi Kabale are not good ,the number of Youth have sold all they have to get jobs but ended up being robed by the Thugs claiming that they are from abroad
People from Kabale are you aware that there is a group of Abafeere serious conning kabale people? “the COW part 2 now targeting the youth who are unemployed. They call themselves “GLOBAL ALLIANCE IN MOTION” that you pay membership of UGX640,000/= non refundeble. then u bring other 2people to subscribe and they also pay that membership of 640,000=/, then you earn a commission of UGX30500 each person that enters under you. So please my fellow youth, I actually encourage to think critically about that quick money. Because even with UGX640,000/= you can start your business and become a millionaire. So abafeere bagaruka kabale and even in another districts
In Kabale town every weekend they are mbu training people at Manhhatan_Hotel conference hall. Security people please save our young population b4 things things fall apart
The ways they are using to mobilise Poor Ugandans, they use Social Media both on Watsapp and on Facebook by directing them to Big Hotels both in Kampala and Municipalities including Mbarara and they always say that they are from abroad for me am wise enough, they have tried me several times but I blasted them serious for example there is a Satan who used to call herself… She sent me a letter that I should attend the daily workshops in Kampala but I said why do you want me to go in Kampala moreover using my transport when I am unemployed, where do you expect me to get money? Since then she had never text me. The letter your seeing posted, its the one she had sent on my email.. Their are thieves
People should better identify the three Personalities ie Omuyayi, Omudongo and Omufere.
“””””””””””””””””””””””””'”””””””””””””To me, Omuyaye means some one who use different tricks to attain what he wants for example a man who goes to a beautiful lady and persuade her by impersonating himself while targeting to win her heart.
Apart from relationship, omuyaye earns abnormal on other people expenses sometimes he uses top security officials to imprison the targeted one
Politically are the big officers who front bills and amendments to gain favour from the head for example the guy who proposed to end term limits and at the end he was rewarded a ministerial post
Omufere is the person who uses advanced knowledge sometimes uses social media networks, owns an office, impersonates himself for example calling himself a manager to a certain company, she/he look responsible and sometimes he looks money like those who are serious terrorising Kigezi Kabale people
Sometimes they claim to be assisting while putting on Uniform of institutions especially at hospitals and Banks etc
Politically omuyaye, is a person who talk to earn favour to any political party but not on heart for example the so called Government spokes persons
Some goes for big People’s offices and claim that their having NRM supporters so they need to be visited for hahaha while targeting money for facilitation… Mbarara People ningira mwabamanya?
Also like how Amama Mbabazi said that “Every fool can teach so teachers should keep Quiet on salary increment” but when time came he was seen proposing to increase their salaries… uhm!
Omudongo the mentioned two ie Omuyaye and Omufere do capitalise on the third personality so called Omudongo
So my friends take care and avoid these personalitiesAs Fatwes Solutions We know very well these thugs so that’s why we have posted this thing so that you dodge them. And it’s mostly in Relationship, Business and Politics and other Aspects of life.
May 25, 2016 at 3:41 pm #1441THANK YOU PEOPLE OF BUIKWE FOR DEFENDING YOUR LAND FROM NRM THIEVES
people of Buikwe district have dispersed away police for defending guarding arich NRM land thief . Fearless villagers have used stones, pangas, axes, hoes to purnish and chase away police yet police men had guns and teargass . Wama thank you hope this is agood lesson to all land thieves and police in uganda. And i do encourage all ugandans to start using whatever your having to defend your lives and properties since we nolonger ave uganda police but we have NRM thief police. Wake up uanda action speaks louder than words . These thieves must go.May 25, 2016 at 3:55 pm #1442With the clock ticking for President Museveni to fill vacancies and announce his fifth-term cabinet, delegations, behind the scenes, are lobbying hard to get their political sons and daughters ministerial jobs.
The president has at least until May 31 to appoint a new cabinet and deliver his State of the Nation address. But, according to insider sources, he is not having a quiet time reflecting on his message. Politicians are using religious, regional and ethnic lobby groups and cultural leaders to persuade the president to give them ministerial jobs.
Others are trying to exploit their ties with members of the first family to make the coveted cabinet list because they cannot access the president directly.
After his inauguration on May 12, sources said, President Museveni retreated to his country home in Rwakitura to reflect on many things. It is there that he has been meeting lobbying delegations from various sub-regions of the country that comprise religious leaders, influential opinion leaders and key power brokers.
GREATER BUSHENYI
On May 20, the president met members of Nyekundire group from greater Bushenyi. It was led by Peter Mugisha, the Bushenyi resident district commissioner. It included Yokasi Makaru, the former LCV chairman for Bushenyi; Yorokamu Bashasha, an influential elder who previously belonged to UPC; Dr Abel Mucunguzi, a lecturer at Kampala International University (KIU); and two Bushenyi town prominent boda boda cyclists, one called Edwin and another Master.
The group, according to our sources, lobbied President Museveni to appoint some of their sons and daughters to cabinet. Currently the greater Bushenyi region has five ministers: Kahinda Otafiire (Justice), Ephraim Kamuntu (water and environment), Elioda Tumwesigye (health) Tarsis Kabwegyere (general duties) and Mary Karooro Okurut (security).
Specifically, the group wanted assurances that Museveni would re-appoint Otafiire, the minister for Justice to cabinet, who lost his Ruhinda parliamentary seat. Otafiire lost to Capt Dononzio Kahonda, first in the party primaries and then in the parliamentary election. Sources told us that the elders told Museveni that Otafiire, outside cabinet, could be more problematic.
In April 1999 when Otaffire was dropped from cabinet, he famously said: “I can cause trouble.”
The elders feared that he could this time round embrace the opposition like former ministers Amanya Mushega or Richard Kaijuka, two influential politicians from greater Bushenyi who are now members of Forum for Democratic Change (FDC).
“We told him that Otafiire is one of the few historical senior army officers from Bushenyi who had been very loyal,” one delegation member told The Observer on Monday.
Thomas Tayebwa, the MP for Ruhinda North, who did not attend the meeting, told us that a politician of Otafiire’s stature does not need to be lobbied for.
“President Museveni has worked with Otafiire for a long time and he knows what he can do. So, I don’t think you need to convince him to keep him in cabinet,” Tayebwa said.
Tayebwa said Otafiire has experience and is still needed to nurture upcoming politicians from greater Bushenyi. Otafiire reportedly annoyed the president last year when he insisted on contesting as an independent.
In December last year when Museveni met a delegation of people from Mitooma to try to resolve the political wrangles in the district, he implored the minister to step down for Kahonda.
Museveni reportedly said Otafiire, being a historical and CEC member, should not be the one breaking party rules. But Otafiire refused to bow out of the race, claiming the primaries were stolen.
Besides Otafiire, the group allegedly lobbied for Rosemary Nyakikongoro, the former woman MP for Sheema who lost her seat to Jacklet Atuhaire, an independent. Sources said the group told Museveni that currently all ministers from Sheema district (Kamuntu and Tumwesigye) are Anglican.
It is time, they said, he considered appointing a Catholic like Nyakikongoro, to balance the equation.
OTHER HOPEFULS
The president reportedly listened to the delegation’s concerns but did not respond to specific requests. The president, instead, thanked the delegation for mobilizing for him in the last election and implored them to educate people about engaging in income-generating projects.
Sources said that if there is an MP who greatly hopes to be in cabinet, it is Moses Balyeku, the Jinja Municipality West MP. A second-term MP, Balyeku has waited in the wings, holding his breath with every passing cabinet reshuffle.
Our sources said Balyeku could not make it into cabinet initially because he was overshadowed by the then Butembe MP Daudi Migereko, who is the outgoing minister for Lands, Housing and Urban Development.
With Migereko out of Parliament, Balyeku believes he has a chance. According to sources, Balyeku is leaning on his relationship with the First Son, Maj Gen Muhoozi Kainerugaba, for some leverage.
Another hopeful is Mike Mukula, the former MP for Soroti municipality. Usually Mukula relies on the Emorimori, the Teso traditional leader, and other religious leaders to make a case for him.
This time round, the NRM vice chairman for the eastern region tried to catch the president’s attention by engaging in various activities. In March, he spent time in Rwenzori sub-region trying to calm the ethnic tensions there, which left many people dead.
He met Charles Wesley Mumbere, the king of the Rwenzururu kingdom and Maj Martin Kamya, the cultural leader of the Bamba in Bundibugyo. Godfrey Kiwanda, the Mityana North MP and chairman of the influential Buganda caucus, too, expects to make it to cabinet this time.
Kiwanda, who vigorously campaigned for Jacob Oulanyah to replace Rebecca Kadaga as speaker of Parliament, has reportedly reached out to key figures in Buganda. Don Wanyama, the senior presidential press secretary, told The Observer yesterday that only Museveni holds the key to cabinet.
“It is the prerogative of the president to appoint whoever he sees fit. I know some people may lobby using various groups. That is normal but in the end, it is the president who will choose,” Wanyama said.
CONMEN
Yet amidst the ton of excitement and anxiety surrounding the ministerial jobs, there is a likelihood that some MPs may fall prey to conmen. Around this time, some people contact MPs claiming to be employees of State House or from security and intelligence organisations.
They usually ask for the curriculum vitae of the MPs, claiming that they are from State House and have been delegated by the president. Others tell the MPs that they have intercepted damaging intelligence information about them that could ruin their chances of becoming ministers.
The deal is simple: if the MP gives them money, they will erase the information. Some MPs have reportedly lost millions of shillings to these conmen, who normally operate in the corridors of Parliament.
Some of the conmen also trail the MPs to their hangouts, sources said. Wanyama said it was naïve for a politician to deal with such people yet they know only the president appoints people to cabinet.
One of the outgoing ministers who did not make it back to parliament told The Observer that for serving ministers, the thought of not making it back to cabinet can affect one’s morale.
“The tension can be so much that sometimes you fail to do your work. You think of all the connections you have made and how you could lose them because you are no longer in cabinet,” the minister said on Monday.
June 12, 2016 at 6:14 pm #1460RTD.COL.DR.KIIZA BESIGYE PENS A LONG LETTER TO THE CHIEF JUSTICE FROM HIS CELL IN LUZIRA:
May 30, 2016, The Honourable Chief Justice of Uganda Kololo, Kampala
Attn: Hon Mr Justice Bart M. Katureebe
Dear Sir, RE: COMPLAINT ABOUT MISTREATMENTAccept my congratulations on your appointment to the high office of Chief Justice of Uganda in 2015.
Beyond extending my congratulations, I also write to you, as the head of the Judiciary to voice my concerns over various matters which involve my person. Given the experiences I have gone through over the years, it is perhaps time to officially put forward my concerns with the hope that these will be addressed.
As you may know, I have participated in the political processes in Uganda since the early 1980’s when I joined the guerrilla force of the National Resistance Army. Convinced about the need to contribute what I could in changing the course of the political, social and economic narrative of Uganda, I plunged into the effort.
Part of government
Following the five-year Bush War, the NRA/NRM captured State power and formed government. I was part of that government until my retirement from the Uganda People’s Defence Forces in 2000. Thereafter, on account of a careful analysis of the political events of the day, I sought to continue shaping that narrative by participating in elective politics for the highest office in Uganda.You will also recall that I was a delegate to the Constituent Assembly that debated and promulgated the 1995 Constitution of Uganda and, therefore, have the advantage of direct personal participation and enriching experiences in many events that have shaped present-day Uganda.
I am a firm believer that change in leadership is critical for any nation, whether developing or developed, perhaps more critical for the former category. As a believer in and practitioner of democratic ideals and principals, I have devoted my energies since the 1980’s towards the pursuit of good governance, the full observance and enjoyment of human rights as well as politico-socio-economic transformation for my beloved country. My commitment to change and transformation of Uganda for Ugandans has been and remains total.
My resolve to observe the Constitution of Uganda has been and remains steadfast and although I have endured tremendous suffering at a personal level because of my beliefs and convictions, I have remained steadfast that true democratic governance will come to Uganda.
Owing to my efforts at pursuing a legitimate shot at the presidency, I have been demonised by the government and ostracised repeatedly and my actions and utterances painted as criminal acts. In this context, a number of issues have arisen that are critical for you to examine and perhaps act upon.
Shortly after the 2001 general elections, where violence was unleashed on and used to terrorise large swathes of the population, I was driven into exile. My return in 2005 was premised on the need to clear my name and be present to continue pressing for transformative and democratic political practice and enlarged and free political space in Uganda.
A few days after my return, I was arraigned in a court and charged with the capital offences of rape and treason. Together with 22 other Ugandans, we were shuttled to and from the High Court on the treason charge. We were also charged with terrorism and arraigned before the General Court Martial for trial. Trials over the same allegations were to be conducted in military and civilian courts.
While this was going on, there were orders by the High Court that we should be released on bail. I was nominated as a candidate in the 2006 presidential elections while in prison. Eventually after much contestation I was released on bail. During this period, the rape trial commenced and was conducted concurrently with the gruelling nation-wide campaign for votes.
Eventually, the court acquitted me on the rape charge. In that case, it was found that evidence had been fabricated by a senior police officer who was also the director of Criminal Investigations Department gainst me. No disciplinary action was taken against this officer. Thankfully, the court was bold and affirmed its independence by acquitting me as no case has been made out requiring my explanation.
The treason trial commenced shortly after the elections were concluded. Fabricated evidence was again assembled against me. In an unprecedented act by security forces, the High Court was raided twice to deny my co-accused bail which had been granted to them by the High Court. There were attempts to remand them in a civil application brought in the main criminal case. They were also charged with murder of non-existent persons allegedly committed in Arua and Bushenyi.
When they were eventually freed, my co-accused were re-arrested violently from the court premises and returned to incarceration where tempting offers for amnesty were dangled at them on a daily basis to persuade them to plead guilty.Some were swayed by these offers while others, knowing that they were innocent, remained steadfast. These events led to the death of one of my co-accused also my brother Joseph Musasizi.
The treason case was eventually dismissed on account of the intervention of the Constitutional Court which recognised that the acts of the Government of Uganda towards both the accused and the High Court made it clear that a free and fair trial would not be possible as the only verdict the government was willing to respect was a verdict of guilty.
I did not agree with the results of the 2001 and 2006 elections respectively and challenged these in the Supreme Court. Although I did not agree with the decisions from this court, I respected them.
In 2011, I participated in the general elections. The results again returned Mr Yoweri Museveni as the winner. Owing to the unprecedented use of money in that election, Uganda’s economy suffered so much with inflation rising to unacceptable levels leading to serious socio-economic effects.
In April 2011, many Ugandans, including myself, joined activities of the walk-to-work campaign. The reaction of the security forces to my participation and presence in these peaceful activities which were intended to draw the attention of the government to the sky-rocketing prices of fuel and other basis commodities was most shocking.
Our decision to walk along the roads to and from our workplaces was interpreted as a threat to national security.
In a most high-handed and unnecessary manner, we were regularly brutalised for choosing to stand with other Ugandans to call attention to a state of affairs that made life for all and sundry unbearable for many months. Various experiences from this period will demonstrate the level of victimisation suffered:-
a) I was arrested at each attempt to join the campaign, whether held in Kampala or elsewhere. These arrests resulted in court appearances on charges alleged to be about public order. Some were traffic related offences. In none of the cases prosecuted was I found guilty or even required to defend myself.The cases were either withdrawn or did not survive beyond the “no-case-to-answer” submission. In several of these cases, the witnesses were clear in their evidence that I had committed no offence. Nonetheless, the Uganda Police Force and the then Director of Public Prosecutions, Mr Richard Buteera, continued to arrest, harangue and attempt to try me, always without success. I am aware that the Inspector General of Police was promoted to a full general and Mr Buteera promoted to the Court of Appeal.
b) On one occasion, I was assaulted with various noxious substances in toxic doses for a sustained period nearly leading to loss of sight. This assault was committed by a police officer called Gilbert Arinaitwe Bwana.
Driven and transported at break-neck speed on the back of a police pick-up, the experience was so horrendous that I had to seek treatment in Kenya when I was eventually allowed to leave the country.
Even in a state where I could not see or even walk on my own, I was arraigned before the Chief Magistrate’s Court at Kasangati to plead to charges around public order. It took the sustained resistance of my lawyers for the court to allow me seek medical attention first. I am informed that this police officer was publicly applauded and perhaps even promoted for these heinous acts.
c) On another occasion together with four others, I was charged in the Chief Magistrate’s Court at Nabweru. The Chief Magistrate, Ms Justine Atukwasa, refused to hear our bail application on grounds that she was busy and instead remanded us to Nakasongola Government Prison.
Expecting to return to the same court for hearing of the application when the when the magistrate had time for us, we were surprised to be brought before the same magistrate in Nakasongola. Apparently, the court had moved to where we were being held instead of hearing our application in Nabweru.Our lawyers did not appear and the court surprisingly granted us bail on its own volition. I gather that this magistrate has been promoted to the High Court and is now a registrar.
d) On another occasion, I was shot in the finger and it remains of limited use to date.The Uganda Police Force suggested that I had injured my finger to attract sympathy. In the period 2011 to 2016, I became the subject of regular harassment, accosting, intimidation and multiple arrests, and have seen the inside of police cells in various parts of the country although my most regular visits have been to Nagalama Police Station.
In the vast majority of the cases where I have attempted to travel to Kampala city where I conduct legitimate business or to seek medical care or engage in social activities such as weddings, church services or public sporting events, or attend political meetings of the Forum for Democratic Change, I have been violently arrested. Sometimes, I am returned to my home in Kasangati. Frequently I am first detained at Nagalama Police Station for hours and then dumped at my home between 11 pm and midnight.
When the police found this strategy ineffective or unsustainable, they resorted to keeping me detained at my home in Kasangati with no access to the outside world, either through human contact or through other communication methods.
On many occasions, communication around my home was jammed.Guests intending to visit me, including my lawyers, were repeatedly denied access to my home or only allowed access when permitted by senior police officers such as Andrew Kaweesi.
Frequently, my visitors were required to record their particulars in a book kept by the police and were either photographed or filmed by police camera crews. The police and other security agencies assembled and remained on my land for many days. Without provision of sanitation facilities, this army of security services soon converted parts of my land into toilets, making them impassable and a life health hazard.
Having been incarcerated at my home for more than 30 days, on the advice of my lawyers, I sought the intervention of the Chief Magistrates Court at Kasangati in an application seeking to secure my release. A similar application had temporarily secured my release in 2011 when placed in similar circumstances.
The application was argued in April 2016 and adjourned for a ruling to be delivered the following day. In a surprising turn of events, the file was recalled to the High Court the same afternoon it had been argued, allegedly for revision.
The revision was allegedly requested for by the Director of Public Prosecutions who was not even a party to the application.
It was unsuccessful as the High Court judge did not find fault with the orders given by the magistrate who had entertained that application. The file was returned to Kasangati to be concluded. While we were waiting for a ruling, another strange event intervened.
On April 29, Deputy Chief Justice Steven Kavuma granted an ex-parte order against the Forum for Democratic Change and myself barring a number of things. This order was obtained in the presence of Deputy Attorney General Mwesigwa Rukutana and two other ministry of Justice officials. This order included two very strange decisions.Ordered not to deliver her ruling
Firstly, the magistrate in the Kasangati case was ordered not to deliver her ruling. Secondly, another application Misc. Cause No. 32 of 2016 which I had filed in the High Court against the Attorney General to secure freedom and have the government stop violating my rights, and which was also pending hearing, was restrained.While I found it fit to attempt to secure my rights using the Constitution and the courts of judicature, Mr Kavuma and the Attorney General saw it best to deny me that avenue and effectively surrender me back to the whims of the Uganda Police Force. Service of the order, the petition or the application in the Constitutional Court has to date not been effected on me.
The two applications that were affected by the order of Mr Kavuma had been filed in order to secure my release because I was being detained without trial. As you are aware Article 43(2) of the Constitution does not permit detention without trial. The effect of Mr Kavuma’s orders was to perpetuate my detention without trial.
As you may know, during the 2016 presidential campaigns, I asserted that we would win by defiance. This word seems to invoke the worst in the security services yet it is a principle embedded in the duties of a citizen as articulated in the Constitution of Uganda.
The specific duty in issue here is the promotion of democracy and the rule of law. Where the law is being abused, citizens are required to resist such abuse because that is the only way to ensure rule of law.
Where corruption, bad governance, wastage of resources, poverty, lack of health facilities and care, etc. abound, any citizen has a duty to resist such things and defy anything that feeds off such vices.
Our campaign was, therefore, a clarion call for citizens of Uganda to resist illegality and injustice as they are duty bound to do. We have been demonised by the police and some State institutions for calling on citizens to defy illegality and injustice.
The most recent events are not any different from what I have endured in the past. In exercising my freedom of movement, I went to Kampala city on May 11. I was violently arrested and driven to Nalufenya Police Station in Jinja District and incarcerated there. In the evening I was flown on a police helicopter to Moroto District to be detained at Moroto Police Station.
On May 13 at 6.40pm, I was arraigned before Moroto Chief Magistrate Charles Yeteise and charged with treason. I did not, contrary to Article 28(3) of the Constitution, have legal representation. The particulars suggest that between February 20 and May 11 at various places in Wakiso and Kampala districts, I, together with others, were engaged in treason. I was then remanded to Moroto Government Prison.
On May 16, I was again taken before the same magistrate and orders were issued to transfer me to Luzira prison in Kampala. I was flown back from Moroto on a private fixed wing aircraft to Kajjansi Airfield and eventually transferred to Luzira prison in the afternoon.
On May 18, I was taken to Nakawa Chief Magistrate’s Court where fresh charges of treason were again read to me. Although the production warrant suggested that the case was fixed for 9am, I was produced in court shortly after 8am and within a few minutes the matter had been concluded and I was returned to Luzira on remand where I remain to date.
Once more, I did not have legal representation and even when I tried to raise my concerns at that time, the presiding magistrate refused to listen to the concerns I wished to address him on and advised that these should be raised with the prisons authorities or the High Court! Today [June 1], I was supposed to re-appear in Nakawa Chief Magistrate’s Court for mention of the case.I was not taken to court but was advised that the court was being moved to hear my case at Luzira prisons ostensibly because of security issues.
From the narration above, I wish to make the following two simple points:
a) My rights as a citizen of Uganda are being abused repeatedly. The police have turned my home into a holding cell. I have been denied freedom of movement and have been arrested each time I set foot outside my house. I have been denied society with others and been turned into an object to be feared or avoided. I am not permitted to even go to a shop on my own.The choice that I face increasingly is where I should remain incarcerated – either at my home in Kasangati or at Luzira prisons. Detention without trial is illegal as far as I can remember. I am being produced before courts outside the normal working hours for these courts. To date, I have not been allowed to have lawyers in court. It seems that while others enjoy the presumption of innocence, in my case I enjoy a presumption of guilt. My appearance in court is regularly shrouded in mystery so much so that friends, relatives, doctors or other members of the public who would wish to attend are denied access.
b) The independence of the Judiciary is increasingly being questioned and as the head of this arm of government, it is incumbent on you to come out boldly and clearly and act to ensure proper administration of justice. As my experiences illustrate, justice is being administered at the whims of the judicial officers to whom the cases are allocated or through interference and undue influence practiced on those individual judicial officers.
I, therefore, seek your intervention to issue such necessary orders and directions to the courts in order that my rights are not trampled on. How, for example, can one court order another not to hear a case before it when each court is supposed to be independent and not come under the control of any person or authority?
It appears increasingly that I might be tried in secret and that the court will be facilitated to handle my matter in Luzira prison. Perhaps the same approach is being considered in respect of the other cases to which I am a party.
My experiences may be viewed as personal to me. However, in my own analysis of the political landscape in Uganda, it is critical to keep in mind, while considering whether to attend to this letter or not the words of Edmund Burke who said that the only thing necessary for evil to triumph is for good men to do nothing.Further it is critical to recall the political events in Uganda’s history including those that affected the office you currently occupy.
I am reminded in that context about the words of Martin Niemoller to whom a powerful poetic speech is attributed: “First they came for the Socialists and I did not speak out, because I was not a Socialist; then they came for the Trade Unionists and I did not speak out, because I was not a Trade Unionist; then they came for the Jews and I did not speak out, because I was not a Jew; then they came for me – and there was no one to speak for me.”
Col (Rtd) Dr Kizza Besigye
June 12, 2016 at 6:17 pm #1462AN OPEN LETTER TO THE NEWLY APPOINTED HEALTH MINISTER, Dr JANE RUTH ACHENG.
Dear Dr Jane,
Congratulations upon your appointment to head the ministry of Health. After reading the cabinet list, your appointment particularly
brought happiness to my soul. In the last three days, I have also observed that many other Ugandans share this happiness with me.
You, Dr Jane is not only a medical doctor but also an excellent administrator in the health sector. I remember when I first met you at
Lira Regional Referral Hospital, when you were the Medical Supretendant. I had come to seek an apprenticeship in the Radiology
Department. I remember your pristine smile as you granted me the permission and you requesting me to go and work there after
completing my studies (sorry ma’am, I am not working there right now). I believe that your bountiful effort in Lira which I am a witness
to, gave birth to your subsequent appointments to head the regional
referral hospitals in the country and the directorate of health services. I also believe that you never lobbied for this position and that the appointing authority saw value in you.
You are well versed with profession and the sector; use this to your advantage and please, revamp the overall healthcare system. Maintain your straight stance and permit no destructions, even from the appointing authority. You have got to get like minded people on your team and fire them
the not so uncommon questions and nevertheless you and your team
must find the answers to them.
If there are structures, why is there understaffing?
Why is there absenteeism?
Why is there poor renumeration?
Why are Health Centre IVs and many district hospitals lacking essential medical services and drugs?
Why do mothers still die due to pregnancy related causes?
Why must a young child die because there is no oxygen or no blood transfusion services in his or her district ?
The health sector problems are so many but I believe that this is the right time for us to be liberated. Personally, I request you to lay a
foundation for the building of at least two more National Referral Hospitals in strategic areas of the North, West or East.
I must also thank the appointing authority for choosing you. I pray that they accord you the necessary support to aid you in your work.
They must also endeavor to appoint more technocrats in all ministries in the next reshuffle.
Thank you.
God bless you in your work.
Adonyo Moses (@AdonyoMoses, adonyogrp@gmail.com - AuthorPosts
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