ugnet_: Time for first children to lead their own lives
Time for first children to lead their own livesBy Humphrey K. RugambanengweOct 9, 2003 I read with relish President Yoweri Musevenis rebuttal to Sunday Monitors Ssemujju Ibrahim Ngandas Natashas Shs 180 million Jet Baby Sparks Off Uproar and Musevenis Expensive Grandchild carried in the Kenyan Daily Nation. I am particularly moved by the emotion provoked in those who hitherto thought the President preferred a non-ostentatious lifestyle. Yet the Presidents daughter cannot be expected to enjoy the privileges of an ordinary citizen. When it comes to privileges, in a free market economy, in a non-welfare state, we are never at the same wavelength. The fact that Museveni can pen a response to Obbos concerns depicts not only intellectual confidence but also the highest level of simplicity and civility, the combative tone that pervades his entire explanation notwithstanding. The President is demonstrating his willingness to be held accountable by the taxpayer while at the same time dispelling cheap talk that he is one and the same as former president Idi Amin (RIP). Museveni articulately implies that if it were not for his familys security, there would be no reason for such an expensive trip. Although I am unable to pick the special circumstances between the times his daughter was born and now, I find his response understandable. His immense love for his children and the precaution he painstakingly takes to ensure their safety in order to deliver total victory to Ugandans (whatever this means), is so touching. But what Museveni falls short of answering is why the paranoia soars the longer he stays in office. And why his children, three of whom are already blessed with their own homes, should be held at ransom. It would appear that as long as the President continues to merge his own life with the life of his children and vice versa, then they are destined to have a common enemy. Otherwise it is difficult to imagine that there could be an assassin lurking in wait for his son-in-law, Mr Edwin Karugire, a benign, modest and down-to-earth gentleman. Take the example of former minister Eriya Tukahiirwa Kategaya. Even when he was the de facto No.2 in this country, it was not unusual to meet the man freely driving himself to places, without an escort, something a mere presidential adviser cannot do. In 1993 while attending a cadre development course with the Kategayas (Julius & Annet) at the then National Leadership Institute, Kyankwazi, I was touched by the level of humility and simplicity they exhibited. This was in sharp contrast with the experience I had with Maj. Muhoozi Kainerugaba (Musevenis son) two years later, when I hosted him in Kabale at a conference of Makerere University students hailing from the district. He came with twenty or so soldiers. He also never looked comfortable! The point is, it serves a good purpose if the Presidents children were left to live their own lives. Only then would they be excused from their parents perceived `sins. Museveni is neither a mistake nor an experiment on Ugandas political scene. He is here for a purpose. Upon capturing state power in 1986, he promised a fundamental change, embedded in the famous 10-point programme. Although some of the promises have since fallen through, genuine Ugandans nod in appreciation when he mentions the expansion of Kampala, large numbers of school-going children, a proliferation of universities and health centres among other things. Nonetheless, some of us get incensed when he swears that he lives for Ugandans and that the safety of his family is the safety of Ugandans. For example, in one of the worst recent carnage on our roads, somewhere near the Katuna border post, tens of souls (Rwandans, Ugandans, Congolese etc) perished when a bus collided with a trailer. I was struck by the swiftness with which the Rwandan government responded to the calamity, while our government merely crossed its fingers. The Rwandan government dispatched two helicopters and a host of ambulances laden with doctors and medical assistants to take care of its citizens. When crest-fallen Ugandans asked if a standby ambulance at Kabale hospital could be hired to ferry their dead, all that they were told was that it had no fuel. As if to underscore our ineptitude, no official statement ever came from government on the calamity. Museveni certainly cannot extricate himself from such ineptitude (the President later sent out a general condolence message - Editor). It also bothers when the President argues his omnipotence and insists he is not prone tomaking mistakes. When Dr Kizza Besigye correctly cited the mistakes/wrongs in the Movement way back in 1999, he was demonized and isolated by the President. Kategaya has since suffered the same fate on account of steadfast rejection of the Project Third Term. By sacking Kategaya, the President sent a clear message that when it comes to political power, he has no friends. And this
ugnet_: Time for first children to lead their own lives
Time for first children to lead their own livesBy Humphrey K. RugambanengweOct 9, 2003 I read with relish President Yoweri Musevenis rebuttal to Sunday Monitors Ssemujju Ibrahim Ngandas Natashas Shs 180 million Jet Baby Sparks Off Uproar and Musevenis Expensive Grandchild carried in the Kenyan Daily Nation. I am particularly moved by the emotion provoked in those who hitherto thought the President preferred a non-ostentatious lifestyle. Yet the Presidents daughter cannot be expected to enjoy the privileges of an ordinary citizen. When it comes to privileges, in a free market economy, in a non-welfare state, we are never at the same wavelength. The fact that Museveni can pen a response to Obbos concerns depicts not only intellectual confidence but also the highest level of simplicity and civility, the combative tone that pervades his entire explanation notwithstanding. The President is demonstrating his willingness to be held accountable by the taxpayer while at the same time dispelling cheap talk that he is one and the same as former president Idi Amin (RIP). Museveni articulately implies that if it were not for his familys security, there would be no reason for such an expensive trip. Although I am unable to pick the special circumstances between the times his daughter was born and now, I find his response understandable. His immense love for his children and the precaution he painstakingly takes to ensure their safety in order to deliver total victory to Ugandans (whatever this means), is so touching. But what Museveni falls short of answering is why the paranoia soars the longer he stays in office. And why his children, three of whom are already blessed with their own homes, should be held at ransom. It would appear that as long as the President continues to merge his own life with the life of his children and vice versa, then they are destined to have a common enemy. Otherwise it is difficult to imagine that there could be an assassin lurking in wait for his son-in-law, Mr Edwin Karugire, a benign, modest and down-to-earth gentleman. Take the example of former minister Eriya Tukahiirwa Kategaya. Even when he was the de facto No.2 in this country, it was not unusual to meet the man freely driving himself to places, without an escort, something a mere presidential adviser cannot do. In 1993 while attending a cadre development course with the Kategayas (Julius & Annet) at the then National Leadership Institute, Kyankwazi, I was touched by the level of humility and simplicity they exhibited. This was in sharp contrast with the experience I had with Maj. Muhoozi Kainerugaba (Musevenis son) two years later, when I hosted him in Kabale at a conference of Makerere University students hailing from the district. He came with twenty or so soldiers. He also never looked comfortable! The point is, it serves a good purpose if the Presidents children were left to live their own lives. Only then would they be excused from their parents perceived `sins. Museveni is neither a mistake nor an experiment on Ugandas political scene. He is here for a purpose. Upon capturing state power in 1986, he promised a fundamental change, embedded in the famous 10-point programme. Although some of the promises have since fallen through, genuine Ugandans nod in appreciation when he mentions the expansion of Kampala, large numbers of school-going children, a proliferation of universities and health centres among other things. Nonetheless, some of us get incensed when he swears that he lives for Ugandans and that the safety of his family is the safety of Ugandans. For example, in one of the worst recent carnage on our roads, somewhere near the Katuna border post, tens of souls (Rwandans, Ugandans, Congolese etc) perished when a bus collided with a trailer. I was struck by the swiftness with which the Rwandan government responded to the calamity, while our government merely crossed its fingers. The Rwandan government dispatched two helicopters and a host of ambulances laden with doctors and medical assistants to take care of its citizens. When crest-fallen Ugandans asked if a standby ambulance at Kabale hospital could be hired to ferry their dead, all that they were told was that it had no fuel. As if to underscore our ineptitude, no official statement ever came from government on the calamity. Museveni certainly cannot extricate himself from such ineptitude (the President later sent out a general condolence message - Editor). It also bothers when the President argues his omnipotence and insists he is not prone tomaking mistakes. When Dr Kizza Besigye correctly cited the mistakes/wrongs in the Movement way back in 1999, he was demonized and isolated by the President. Kategaya has since suffered the same fate on account of steadfast rejection of the Project Third Term. By sacking Kategaya, the President sent a clear message that when it comes to political power, he has no friends. And this sack