By
Oweyegha-Afunaduula
I have lived in Uganda continuously since 1990. I was involved in the intellectual debates of the early 1990s when soldiers and civilians would peacefully debate and clash on national issues, some political, some non-military, without civilians ever suspecting that they would be kidnapped or roughened up, ultimately getting incarcerated in Luzira or other centers of abuse of freedom of Ugandans. We praised the government of President Tibuhaburwa Museveni for being an open-minded loving and listening institution. Many young people benefitted from the debates on the issues and got deeply involved in advancing ideas, some of which benefitted the government and the country. Many debating platforms called Bimeza sprang up. Numerous government and military officials did not shy away from debates, unlike today when they would rather keep silent and let one person – President Tibuhaburwa Museveni outpour his ideas onto society and wait to act on them, often to make the President happy rather than suggest alternative ideas to him.
Eventually, the debate became squeezed out of the country’s socio-political and other processes. Even the universities almost banned debates, preferring a conspiracy of silence to reign in academia. Soon the conspiracy of silence proliferated in every institution. Simultaneously society became militarized with so many paramilitary groups being erected ostensibly to ensure peace and security.
However, it became clear that the aim was to conquer the natives, control their movements and minds, and ensure that mostly the military and government officials could speak on anything without contradicting the choices and decisions of President Tibuhaburwa Museveni and his government. This trend has meant that the country has become far more intellectually poor than was the case in the 1960s. In universities, it is academicism and scholasticism are preferred for intellectual development and dynamics, and hence academic jargon is on the rise.
The universities have never been more ineffective towards the needs of democracy, freedom, and justice than they are today. This is why when Ugandan citizens are kidnapped from a foreign country and arraigned in kangaroo courts called military courts we no longer hear academic staff and student associations coming out with positions to restore sanity in leadership and governance in the country. They keep quiet even when agents of Justice are hounded and rushed to prisons with no opportunity to defend themselves.
The case of respected lawyer Aeron Kizza is fresh in our minds. He was supposed to be the main lawyer for incarcerated Dr Kiiza Besigye. His justice and by extension, that of Dr. Kiiza Besigye was abused by the military Court deciding to arrest the lawyer, roughing him, ostensibly for contempt of the court. The whole world now knows Aeron Kizza’s justice and human rights have been abused by the military Court. Besides, the Uganda Constitution 1995 made by the National Resistance Movement (NRM) is being violated by abusing the Justice and human rights of Ugandans; the latest to suffer such abuse is lawyer Aeron Kizza Besigye.
I am one of the many senior citizens of Uganda wondering what kind of Uganda we shall leave behind. Already we are witnessing how our leaders are pretending that they are building democracy, Justice, and freedom as key virtues for Ugandans while at the same time doing everything possible to violate them. As we advance towards the 2030s state-inspired abuse of power and violence are on the rise as if the aim is to maintain and sustain fear in leadership and governance in Uganda.
I appeal to President Tibuhaburwa Museveni to lead the country out of militarily imposed fear, insecurity, and hopelessness. I also spoke to the President to intervene in the case of Lawyer Aeron Kizza the way he intervened in the case of the NUP supporters, politician Michael Mukula, and other cases.
All of us -leaders and the led – must resolve to keep Uganda among the civilized nations of the world. It is the gift we can leave behind for our children and children’s children. If we don’t we shall have wasted time and energy leading and governing Uganda because ultimately we shall have led it to nowhere. Future generations will condemn us perpetually.
We should not continue to militarize life, democracy, freedom, and justice. Without genuine democracy, freedom, and justice we cannot hope to hand Uganda to future generations as a developed, transformed, and progressive country. By the time we all leave the scene Uganda will be deep in the abyss of underdevelopment, over-dependency, impoverishment, and ecological and environmental decay, which are the ingredients needed to sustain a country dominated by violence.
For God and My Country.