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By Oweyegha-Afunaduula
Center for Critical Thinking and Alternative Analysis
We are in a century in which information, knowledge and conservation and management of natural resources have become even more critical than the past because the human species, Homo sapiens, has chosen chosen to ignore information and knowledge for survival and instead emphasize militarization of everything conceivable simultaneously with environmentally unconscious exploitation of natural resources ostensibly for economic development.
Perhaps nowhere is this more exacerbated than NRM-governed Uganda. The President, Tibuhaburwa Museveni, has made it absolutely clear that when development and environment clash, development takes precedence.
Although all development is or should be people’s development, he puts the people last in his equation of development. In his own words, infrastructure development comes first, then nature, environment and lastly people.
He does not see the relationship between environmentally-conscious development, sustainable ecology, conservation and management of natural resources and the bio cultural landscapes of the various indigenous groups of Uganda.
Consequently, there has been and continues to be biophysical, and bio cultural erosions as land is assaulted by developments, including land grabbing and resources grabbing that are clearly being carried out by people with exogenous roots in pursuit of their selfish interests.
They are being encouraged not only by the President’s philosophy of development disconnecting people’s cultures, identities and belonging within the country’s bio-ecological systems such as those of the Lake Victoria ecosystem; and his insistence that interests are superior to identity and belonging.
Consequently, whole cultural communities have been displaced and dispossessed, clearly in the interest of foreigners. This has endangered tie-testes resources conservation and management in every part of Uganda.
In this article I want to articulate and clarify the view that militarization of Uganda’s part of the Lake Victoria ecosystem is destroying time-tested conservation and management of the lake and its resources. This is part of the general militarization of everything conceivable in the country.
Affected people and communities in Uganda have called for the demilitarization of the lake but government continues to ignore them while hyping the interests of foreigners. The future of conservation and management of the lake and its resources is in jeopardy. So is the future of our people and communities whose livelihoods depend on the lake is also in jeopardy.
The whole lake ecosystem is in danger of collapsing due to the high-handedness of the NRM government and its lack of respect for the fishing communities. The children of the fisherfolk are ending up as domestic and international slaves, enriching a few people in and connected to power.
As a Conservation Biologist instructed at the beginning of the 1980s, I am professionally obliged to continue guiding beyond my professionally active life so that present future generations do not lose connectivity to the environment ecologically, biologically, culturally, psychologically, ethically and morally. I am obliged to guide on what will forever destroy experience ecological sustainability and its linkage to environmentally conscious natural resources conservation and management.
By choosing militarization of Lake Victoria ecosystem the NRM government in UGANDA has chosen to erase the time-tested conservation and management of her part of the lake ecosystem, focusing on disconnecting the people and whole traditional-local communities from the ecosystem.
Government has placed the management of ecosystem in the hands of the military, which, by concentrating on excluding the people from the lake, is creating an artificial system in which the key managers are soldiers. This has reduced the value of scientific research to the survival of ecosystem and the communities that have depended on it since time immemorial.
Unfortunately, the militarization of the lake has only served the interests of foreigners such as Chinese, Indians and Rwandese at the expense of the indigenous communities of Ugandans. The lucky soldiers involved in the militarization process have not only killed some Ugandans said to be using officially unacceptable fishing nets, but have become excessively wealthy as poverty devastates the people and whole communities.
Government continues to claim the military is doing a good job in conservation and management of the natural resources in Lake Victoria. Meanwhile the government repeatedly tells them to work hard, yet their livelihood depended of fishing, which they can no longer engage in.
Interestingly, as Uganda entrenches militarization of the Lake Victoria ecosystem, Kenya and Tanzania have not disconnected the people and communities from the lake. They continue to fish like they have done former centuries but the fish continues to flourish and nourish the people and communities while the governments get foreign exchange from the fish to provide goods and services.
Uganda, Kenya and Tanzania are members of the East African Community. They claim to be managing the Lake ecosystem together, but militarization of the Uganda part of the ecosystem is undermining that cooperation.
In conclusion, militarization of the Lake Victoria ecosystem in Uganda must be replaced by de-militarization in the interest of our people and communities ecologically dependent on fishing. Their disconnection from the lake has rendered unproductive and poor. They have been converted into a floating population that can be hired and fired by people in power or connected to power, including the Chinese, Indians and Rwandese.
Return of respect, justice, human rights, community rights, socioeconomic rights, freedom and democracy for the fishing people and communities is critical. It will release the people so that they can fully participate in the social, economic and political life in the country. Or else they are converted into either useless beings or commodities to be sold and bought. This is already happening. It must stop.
For God and My Country.
The Writer Is a Conservation Biologist
DISCLAIMER: The views expressed in this article belong to the writer. They don’t reflect those of Ultimate News or it’s affiliates. If you have a story in your community, send us an email on ultimatenews19@gmail.com


