Dear Mr. Andrua,

Please calm down! I'm on the same side as you and all who desire genuine, non 
paternalistic development in West Nile and indeed in Uganda. All  I've done in 
my article is to satirise the subject matter, given the mostly intellectual 
predisposition on this forum. Refer to all items in inverted commas in my 
original article and hope you will see what I intended in the first place.  But 
clearly, for now, it seems I have missed the point, which is such a shame. 

Have a great week.

Maureen Ayikoru

Sent from my iPhone

On 4 Sep 2011, at 19:14, alex free <freeal...@gmail.com> wrote:

> Dear Brothers and Sisters,
> 
> 
> Those who agree with me will not tow the line of argument of Maurine Ayikoru 
> and the like. Maurine is talking about boarding the so-called yellow bus, I 
> don't know which yellow bus! But the fact is, that yellow bus is a symbol of 
> of politics paternalism and favouritism. I mean in a paternalistic political 
> setting such as we experience in Uganda, Cameroon etc, the leaders act as 
> patrons. When a road is build, a hospital erected or something else, it is 
> seen as a favour from the big person and the citizens where such a 
> development takes place are supposed to be grateful and see the figure of 
> that politician as a saviour! That type of politics, dear Maurine, is not 
> what we advocate in Uganda and it is not the reason why most of the times 
> people of West Nile, Acholi, Lango etc vote in a different direction. The 
> normal understanding is that it is taxes which everybody pays which bring in 
> those services. So, for a citizen in Kasese or Abim to have electricity or 
> clean running wat
 er whereas the one of Moyo doesn't is unfair. Does the tax paid by the citizen 
in Moyo not reach Kampala so much so that they have no records of paying taxes? 
Is it why then they are denied of electricity? If other members of a house 
receive goods essential which are useful for their daily living, why not the 
other family members? Is West Nile not part of Uganda? Don't we, as West 
Nilers, have a right to complain when injustice is done to us? 
> Maurine, I tell you, without electricity, there is no development, what so 
> ever, even if Museveni talks about industrialisation, modernisation, 
> development of science, etc!
> I want to say that it is the presence of electricity that attracts 
> development activities. West Nile has full potential to consume electricity 
> just like Kampala, Mbarara, Jinja etc. When there is power, there will be 
> industries, factories, schools will use, households will use for lighting, 
> cooking, students use for reading, etc. 
> Others will add to that. I want to conclude by saying that we should avoid 
> cheap arguments and nobody must deny West Nile nor should we be silenced 
> about our rights!
> 
> Andrua      
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