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BREAKING NEWS: Argentina Wins World Cup 2022

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Lionel Scolani has a reason to smile after his men delivered his first world cup of his training career in a night that ended 3-3 in normal but the Argentina merged victorious with 4 goals against France’s 2 goals n penalty spots

The first goal was scored by captain Lionel Messi from a penalty spot in the 23rd minute of the game after a foul in the box by Mousa Dembele on Angel Dimaria adding his goal count 6.

At 36 minutes with an assist from MacAllister, Angel Di Maria had to strike with another beautiful goal making it 2-0 for the Argentines.

France came back energized in the second half with their speed merchant Kylian Mbappe scoring a penalty goal in the 80th minute and in the 81st minute making it 2-2 adding his count 7 goals in the tournament.

The match ended 2-2 in 90 minutes forcing an extra time that had Messi score another goal making it 3-2 in the 109th minute adding his goal count to 7 goals in this years tournament.

However, their was a turn of events in the 117th minute when France won another penalty pushing the night to a draw of 3-3 and adding his count to 8 goals in the tournament.

This is Argentina’s third world cup trophy since winning it in 1978 which they hosted in Mexico and 1986 which they hosted while France missed to defend the prestigious global trophy having won it 1998 which they hosted and 2018 in Russia.

This brings an end to this year’s tournament that had big teams like Spain, Portugal, England, Brazil, German among others knocked out by underdogs.

Lionel Messi now adds the World Cup trophy to his cabinet making him the world’s greatest player of all time and it’s been possibly his last world cup appearance leaving the stage for other young turks like his PSG team mate and France’s speed merchant Kylian Mbappe among others.

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Messi Vs Mbappe: Who Is Taking It Home? Drop Your Prediction Here

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Messi Vs Mbappe
Messi Vs Mbappe

The world cup comes to an end tonight with defending Champions France testing their energy against South America’s Argentina at the Lusail Iconic Stadium in Qatar in a highly anticipated show down that has had fans across the world weigh in on several predictions.

Lionel Messi will be hoping to secure a trophy that would cement his status as perhaps the game’s ever greatest player. The 35-year-old will bow out from the global stage with his arch rival Christiano Ronaldo who went home in tears after being knocked out by Morocco.

On the other hand Kylian Mbappe could solidify his claim as the young pretender to Messi’s football throne if his speedy and skillful guns can help France to defend the Global football trophy since Brazil in 1962.

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Lionel Messi’s Argentina was bowed out by Germany in 2014 in the finals which took place in Brazil while 23-year-old Kylian Mbappe’s France humbled Croatia in the 2018 finals that took place in Russia.

Both Kylian Mbappe and Lionel Messi are colleagues at France’s League One Champion Paris Saint Germain (PSG) and Mbappe is currently the world’s highly earning player taking home a whooping 1.6m Pounds per week.

Both France And Argentina are aiming for a third world cup title with France having won it in 1998 and 2018 while Argentina won it in 1986 and 1978.

France beat Morocco’s Atlas Lions 1-0 to book their spot at the finals while Argentina humbled Modric’s Croatia 3-0 to book their spot at the finals. Croatia also managed to humble down Morocco 2-1 to take the third place while Morocco convincingly made history in the fourth place.

The Winner will go home with $42million, Runner up $30 Million while third place takes home $27 million while the fourth placed team walks away with $25 million.

However, to set the reactions rolling, a tweep who goes by the names of Jose Miguel Polanco predicted on 20th March 2015 at 11:27pm that Lionel Messi Will today 18th December 2018 win the World Cup to become the world’s greatest player of all times.

Drop your prediction in the comment section. The Match starts at exactly 6:00pm EAT.

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OWEYEGHA-AFUNADUULA: The Reality Of An Integrated East African Community In Our Lives Remains a Big Question

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President Kagame And President Museveni at State House Entebbe

By Oweyegha-Afunaduula

Tanzania, Kenya, Uganda, Rwanda, Burundi, Democratic Republic of Congo and South Sudan are members of the East African Community (EAC). Initially, when it replaced the colonially formed East African Common Services Organisation (EACSO) in 1967 only Tanzania, Kenya and Uganda belonged to it.,

When it collapsed in 1977 it was largely due to political discord between the top leaders of the three countries (Jomo Kenyatta of Kenya, Julius Nyerere of Tanzania and Idi Amin of Uganda), but also due to economic and political sabotage of its institutions – especially the East African Railways Corporation, East African Airways Corporation and East African Harbors Corporation – by top politicians in Kenya.

The Kenyan politicians, for example, bought trailers or haulers to transport goods to and from Mombasa, thereby competing with the trains of the East African Railways. That was the beginning of the collapse of the East African Railways Corporation and the emergence of Kenya Railways, Tanzania Railways and Uganda Railways following the collapse of the Community.

A story has traversed decades that one day former powerful Kenyan politician in the Jomo Kenyatta and Arap Moi governments, who died recently at the age of 101, Charles Njonjo, one day entered an East African Community DC 10 aircraft  – the best those days – he noticed that the Pilot was and African. I don’t know if it was Uganda’s Francis Babu.

He got so annoyed that he disembarked from it. He preferred a white pilot. The story of East African Airways was never the same from that time on. Kenya started to deny the airline money. By the time it collapsed, it was a miniature of its past. Out of its space emerged Kenya Airways, which came dominate East African routes during the reign of Arap Moi, Tanzania Airways and Uganda Airways.

When the East African Community was revived on 7th July 2000, its corporations were not revived. Even the one I worked in as a Senior Fisheries Research Officer, the East African Marine Fisheries Research Organisation (EAMFRO) with Headquarters in Zanzibar, and the East African Fresh Water Fisheries Research Organisation (EAFFRO) were not revived.

The most active aspect of it is the East African Legislative Council, where East African politicians draw emoluments and allowances and the countries’ leaders dump some of their supporters.

It is not only East African Community grouping former colonial enclaves South of the Sahara together, mainly to advance economic cooperation rather than political integration

There are Upper Riparian countries in the African Great Lakes region include: Burundi, the Democratic Republic of the Congo, Ethiopia, Kenya, Malawi, Mozambique, Rwanda, Zambia, Tanzania, and Uganda. Sudan, Ethiopia, Eritrea and Egypt are called the Lower Riparian countries.

Amongst these, Burundi, Rwanda and Tanzania formed Kagera Basin Organisation (KRB) and Uganda acceded to it in 1981. They wanted to manage poverty and environmental degradation and improve the quality of life of their people together.

The true Great Lakes region consists of three countries are Rwanda, Burundi and the Democratic Republic of Congo DRC) – which together constitute a common geographical area composed of communities interconnected by language, culture, trade and family ties. Tanzania, Kenya and Uganda is apparently also included in the Great Lakes Region. The Great Lakes region has been home of conflicts, and promises to be so well in the future.

Burundi and Rwanda are at times also considered to be part of Central Africa, which the United Nations defines as a region consisting of Cameroon, Central African Republic, Chad, Congo Republic – Brazzaville, Democratic Republic of Congo, Equatorial Guinea, Gabon, São Tomé & Principe.

They belong to the Economic Community of Central African States (ECCAS). ECCAS is committed to mobilize all its resources and energy to make Central Africa a region of peace, prosperity and solidarity based on a unified economic and political space where each citizen moves freely in order to ‘thus ensures sustainable and balanced developmentt.

Djibouti, Eritrea, Ethiopia, and Somalia are collectively known as the Horn of Africa. The area is the easternmost projection of the African continent. They belong to the Intergovernmental Authority on Development (IGAD) in Eastern Africa, which also includes Uganda.

Sixteen countries -Angola, Botswana, Comoros, Democratic Republic of Congo, Eswatini, Lesotho, Madagascar, Malawi, Mauritius, Mozambique, Namibia, Seychelles, South Africa, United Republic Tanzania, Zambia and Zimbabwe – belong to a regional economic community called Southern African Development Community (SADC). SADC is the strategic framework for delivering on Africa’s goal for inclusive and sustainable development and is a concrete manifestation of the pan-African drive. …

Burundi, Democratic Republic of Congo, Egypt, Eritrea, Ethiopia, South Sudan, Sudan, Tanzania and Uganda – also belong to a politically designed socioeconomically-oriented bureaucratic Organisation called Nile Basin Initiative ostensibly formed to manage the waters of the Nile effectively for the benefit of the member countries (not necessarily the peoples) of the region.

All the countries, whatever grouping they belong to, were formally colonial enclaves, which were said to have gained “political” independence from their former colonial masters, with the colonial administrators replaced by black ones, initially at the topmost level before Africanization took root.

However, they remained economically dependent and politically controlled by their former colonial rulers directly or through bilateral or multilateral arrangements. Despite the entrapment, they have tried to come together for the common good of socioeconomic, sociopolitical and sociocultural liberation and self-reliance, which has proved very difficult because the former colonial master use the backdoor to infiltrate the countries and regions for their continued exploitation and control over resources.

The greed and selfishness of the rulers has made it easy for the former colonial masters and the new arrivals, especially China, to frustrate the countries. Besides, the regional organizations they form increasingly depend on loans (wrongly called foreign aid) for their structure and function.

Sometimes the leaders of the countries are recruited into the spy networks of the former colonial masters, US or Russia to spy on their colleagues. Consequently, the leaders do not trust each other. This is confounded b the intransigence of some of them or the fact that some of them support rebel activities in some the other countries or rob the resources of the others.

Nevertheless, talk of economic cooperation and political integration predominates in some of the groupings. Some of the leaders, especially the most long-ruling leaders in the Africa South of the Sahara, President Tibuhaburwa Museveni, seem to be more attracted to the ideas of economic cooperation and political integration.

However, suspicions and mistrust among the leaders act as barriers to these ideals in the short- medium- and long-term. Therefore, the current leaders, like those before them. May leave power without getting anywhere near achieving economic and political integration.

If you asked whether I thought, believed or was convinced economic and political integration was possible at the moment, especially in East Africa where it has been sung by leaders more than in the other regions, I would hesitate to say yes. Let me articulate and clarify why I am not so confident that East Africa will experience economic and political integration in our lifetime.

I have already mentioned the intransigence, greed and selfishness of some of our political leaders, who do not respect the sovereignty of their neighboring countries. For example, Rwanda and Uganda invaded Zaire (now DRC) in 1998, according to the leaders to overthrow President Desire Kabila ostensibly because he was harboring rebels who were destabilizing their countries. There armies have been in DRC since then and now Uganda is famed to have 4000 troops in mineral-rich Eastern DRC.

Both Rwanda and Uganda were accused by DRC of robbing its resources, massacring its citizens, raping women and committing crime against humanity. Uganda was, this year, heavily fined by the International Court of Justice (ICJ) for the excesses of its soldiers in the DRC and government started recently to pay the fines.

Although Rwanda was also accused by DRC of more or less the same crimes it was acquitted by the ICJ. However, DRC has continued to accuse Rwanda of supporting the rebellion of refugees (the Banyamulenge, so called because they have since they sought refugee in DRC occupied a place called Mulenge) against the government of that country, and even contributing soldiers to the ranks of the rebels.

According to reports from DRC, Rwandese soldiers, Banyamulenge rebels and Uganda soldiers are involved in robbing Congolese resources, raping women, killing people and committing gross human rights. It is unlikely that Congolese would trust an East African Community in which Rwanda and Uganda are members. At least not now.

There is widespread belief in East African and Great Lakes regions that the small ethnicity of Tutsis which rules Rwanda and Uganda wants to establish its hegemony over the whole area. One school of thought is that most East Africans are not amused by the current moves, especially by President Tibuhaburwa Museveni to admit Somalia and Ethiopia to the East African Community.

The school also holds that admitting Somalia and Ethiopia to the East African Community would mean the community predominantly composed of countries ruled by people from the nomadic pastoralist energy system. Those countries would be Kenya, Rwanda, Uganda, Somalia, Ethiopia and South Sudan.

Therefore, fear of domination is growing among the traditionally settled people of East Africa that economic and political integration does not make much sense if it is going to benefit a small ethnic group of cattle keepers. Rwanda and Uganda are today cited as countries where the absolute majority are dominated militarily, economically, socially, culturally and environmentally by people of the nomadic pastoralist energy system.

In Uganda, citizens are lamenting that most of the land grabbing displacing human populations from their ancestral lands, disrupting cultures and livelihoods of communities and converting once securely settled people into modern-day nomads and slaves, belong to the nomadic pastoralist energy system.

Like before, the once well-organized federal entities that resisted the economic and political integration pursued by the British colonialists, and now constitutionally reduced to cultural institutions, will resist an integrated East African Community even if militarily pursued.

The most important constraint to integration will, however, be the education systems in the region, which continue to value academic tribes (disciplines) and the academic hegemony of those belonging to the academic tribes. The products of the education system are a result of knowledge disintegration.

They are educated to preserve and perpetuate disintegration of anything conceivable. They possess disintegrated minds and are, therefore, unable to see things holistically. They cannot act as agents of integration at any level of society. They are likely to talk more about integration than be agents of integration.

To integrate anything, you need to have a critical mass of actors with integrated minds – those who do not see the world in bits. Therefore, unless we have schools and universities that are capable of producing people with integrated minds, we cannot hope to see an integrated East African Community in our life lime.

So the challenge our present day schools and universities is “when to begin graduates with integrated minds in a century fast and complex changes. We cannot continue superimposing simplicity over complexity. Simplicity and seeking simplicity accompanied by overspecialization in education and research belonged to the 20th Century.

Complexity and understanding complexity and emphasizing liberalization and emancipation in education belongs to the 21st Century and beyond.  When we integrate, we seek reconnection and complexity. We must have complexity-loving teachers to produce for us graduates who hate simplicity and love complexity, which is the goal of integration.

If we have been destroying our cultures, our indigenous groups, our institutions, our nationality and our sovereignty and oversimplifying our society in the hope that we shall soon have an integrated East African Community, we need to rethink. Simplicity does not serve integration. It serves disintegration.

We must rethink our education so that we begin to produce people who can be agents of integration rather than disintegration. The dismembering of Uganda into small meaningless groups is a process of simplification.

It shows that our leaders, who were exposed to disintegrating education, have been successfully applying simplification. If elsewhere in East Africa it is the same story of simplification, then we are far from having an integrated region. It means we have been concentrating on disintegrating the region, undermining integration. You cannot move towards integration through disintegration.

If we are to integrate East Africa, we must use Uganda as an example by reconnecting and reintegrating the nation states that formed Uganda on 9th October 1962, which are today bantustanised into more than 139 districts.

The nation states were: Acholi, Ankole, Buganda, Bugisu, Bukedi, Bunyoro, Busoga, Karamoja, Kigezi, Lango, Moyo, Sebei, Teso, Toro and West Nile. If we integrate Uganda back to what it was, we can integrate East Africa to what we want it to be. We cannot carry Uganda into an Integrated East Africa when it is totted with small, meaningless entities.

Integration in Europe, USA and Canada is proceeding well because their education planners and managers have de-emphasized academic tribes and academic hegemony. They are producing agents of integration with integrated minds.

You cannot unite East Africa, let alone Africa, without an integrating, emancipating education producing integrated, integrating minds. Rethink education first.

For God and My Country

The Writer Is a Ugandan Scientist And Environmentalist

DISCLAIMER: The views expressed in this article are solely for and belong to the author/ writer. They don’t reflect, portray or represent Accord Communications Limited, it’s affiliates, owners or employees. If you have a story in your community or an opinion article, let’s publish it. Send us an email via editorial@accordconsults.com or WhatsApp +254797048150

France Vs Morocco: Who’s Winning This? Your Prediction

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The dream to lift a world cup trophy by Real Madrid defender Luka Modric for his national team Croatia was for the second time shuttered yesterday by Lionel Messi’s Argentina in a quite convincing win of 3-0 yesterday night at the Qatar 2022.

Croatia made it to the finals in the FIFA world cup with France in Moscow in 2018 but Les Bleus moved out victorious and Modric went home crying, he put back his effort and came back to the 2022 campaign in Qatar, eliminating strong teams like Brazil which ended at the knock out stages of quarter finals.

Just like the way Portugal which was eliminated by the Atlas Lions of Morocco, Croatia was surprised by the sharp display of Lionel Scaloni’s boys who destroyed Croatia’s defense scoring 3 convincing goals.

After sending Galeth Southgate’s men back to London, France returns tonight in a much anticipated battle to face Africa’s first team at the Semi finals in history Morocco who are also determined to write history in Qatar.

What’s Your Prediction? Will Warid Regragui over take Didier Dechamps to be the first African team to get to the World Cup finals in history?

Drop your prediction in the comment section.

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OWEYEGHA-AFUNADUULA: On Muhoozi’s Claims That He’s The Leader Of This Generation

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By Oweyegha-Afunaduula

In a BBC News article of 30th October 2022 titled “Muhoozi Kainerugaba – Uganda’s ambitious tweeting General”, Professor Peter Kagwanja, of the Kenya-based Africa Policy Institute, does not think or believe that President Tibuhaburwa Museveni and his son are contradicting each other. Neither does he think and believe that the family of the President is split because of power.

The Professor’s observation is not far-fetched from the truth. If President Tibuhaburwa Museveni was in contradiction with his son, he would have acted to discipline him militarily since there is no evidence to show he is a politician belonging to the President’s party, the National Resistance Movement (NRM).

He cannot take the General for disciplining by the Party’s disciplinary arrangement. He has consistently promoted him until recently he gave him the highest rank in the army. That showed he is happy with his son. If there was a rank higher than General, he would most likely give it to him.

In the past, soldiers who showed deviant behavior would either be demoted or kept on Katebe (meaning assigned no work), General Tinyefunza alias Sejusa and General Henry Tumukunde, were separately and on different occasions either sidelined from army work or paraded before the military tribunal for disciplining. They were not politico-military men like most of their colleagues from the bushes of Luwero.

It was General Sejusa who in 2013 revealed to Ugandans and the world that there was a plot called Muhoozi Project designed to ensure that General Muhoozi Kainerugaba stepped into the shoes of his father in case he was no longer President of Uganda. There is no doubt that the President has handled his son differently from how he handled Sejusa and Tumukunde.

Although he demoted him from the all-powerful position of Commander of the Land Forces, he has allowed him to advertise his political ambitions while in army uniform. It is possible that the Muhoozi Project is on course since General Muhoozi Kainerugaba’s supporters have publicly demonstrated that they prefer him to his father.

Very recently they wore Ti-shirts with “Muhoozi Project” on. They were not arrested. Curiously the President recently travelled to Hoima to open a hotel of one of the key supporters of General Muhoozi Kainerugaba and architects the Muhoozi Project.

The President, who is adequately aware of everything small and big in the country, instead expressed ignorance of the Muhoozi Project. This way he has allowed a situation to obtain that he does not mind if his son expresses interest in his chair.

Indeed, General Muhoozi Kainerugaba, in one of his tweets, showed that he is not a politician, which other Generals of the Uganda Peoples Defense Forces (UPDF), such as his father, Kahinda Otafiire and Jim Muhwezi are.

It is likely he will continue to make political statements with no threat of being called to order by the Commander-in-Chief of UPDF or those immediately below the Commander-in-Chief. They will continue to ignore General Muhoozi Kainerugaba’s political stances wile still a serving officer of UPDF.

By their collective silence, they are knowingly or unknowingly spurring General Muhoozi Kainerugaba on and creating the public impression that the army is President Tibuhaburwa Museveni’s family military outfit, Indeed the President has many times in the past referred to UPDF as his army.

Even very recently General Muhoozi Kainerugaba also referred to UPDF as his army when in one of his tweets he said he could capture Kenya’s Capital City in two weeks. One academic who did not want to be identified said, “In effect the army is co-owned by the President and his son. Being called Uganda People’s Defense Forces is a deception. The people of Uganda have no sovereign ownership of the army. President Museveni and his son have”.

One politically serious statement in one of General Muhoozi Kainerugaba’s recent tweets was that the NRM is not serving the interests of Ugandans. If it was a statement from another General, NRM politician or an Opposition politician, the NRM Chairman, who is also the absolute ruler of Uganda, would have swung into action publicly.

Instead, many believe, he arranged a family meeting between the General and his uncle, General Salim Saleh Akandwanaho. General Muhoozi Kainerugaba informed Ugandans and the world about the Meeting in a tweet.

What General Kainerugaba was to discuss with his uncle remained secret. However, he promised that he would reveal what transpired in the meeting as soon as possible. I don’t know whether he has.

However, I am sure the Commander-in -Chief and President of Uganda, Tibuhaburwa Museveni and his military Commanders were probably not completely in the dark of what General Muhoozi Kainerugaba was going to discuss with his uncle.

At least General Kahinda Otafiire has declared his preference for Tibuhaburwa Museveni to continue as President beyond 2026, indicating he is not amused by Muhoozi Kainerugaba’s tweeter-based politicking and expression of interest in the topmost job in the country. However, Kahinda Otafiire’s son, Ernesto Otafiire, has told General- Muhoozi Kainerugaba to be humble and go slow, since, according to him, their parents are in the evening of their regime.  He even warned the General that when the aging Generals leave, exile life is staring at them (the children). He went on,

This country does not belong to any of (us). It was here before we came, it has been here and it will be here long after we are gone, So be humble and calm down”.

What seems to be increasingly evident is that Uganda was not just captured by the rebels of Luwero, but is in the hands of a few of them and members of their families. Obviously the so-called NRM historicals who have become stinkingly wealthy would rather stick with President Tibuhaburwa Museveni rather than switch to his son. In their thinking and belief, their wealth would be safe so long as the President is in power.

Oblivious to the truism that most of the millions of Ugandans of this generation are tired of the rule by the family of his father and his bush colleagues, General Muhoozi Kainerugaba claims to be the leader of the generation, which includes the vast majority of the youths of the country.

In one far-reaching tweet the General wrote: “In a few weeks, I will make an important announcement. Not on Tweeter but by other means. I will make it in my personal capacity and as the leader of our generation”.

By “our generation”, General Muhoozi Kainerugaba may have been referring to the group of young people who are anxious to ensure that when his father leaves, he automatically replaces him as President of Uganda. His father is silent, which is sending the signal that he might be approving of what his son is doing outside the military but still in army uniform.

According to Professor Peter Kagwanja, cited by BBC News of 30th October 2022, “That family (Tibuhaburwa Museveni’s) controls Uganda. His mother is in the cabinet, and he is the prince, waiting to succeed his father,” said Peter Kagwanja of the Kenya-based Africa Policy Institute. Like former US President Donald Trump once did, the general uses tweeter to raise his profile”.

If this is true, then General Muhoozi Kainerugaba, Salim Saleh Akandwanaho and President Tibuhaburwa Museveni are not in contradiction at all. Professor Kagwanja says, General Muhoozi Kainerugaba is an “agent provocateur” who tweets to gain access to African leaders and to advance Uganda’s political objectives:

Professor Peter Kagwanja adds, “Muhoozi provokes, then his father arranges for him to go and apologise, and in this way he is introduced into the circles of leaders. Father and son were working together. Muhoozi projects himself as the opposite to his father, of being a chaotic person – that makes his father look good.”

If the BBC News article were written today, Professor Kagwanja would probably be cited saying, “President Tibuhaburwa Museveni is the one who arranged for his son and his uncle Salim Saleh to talk so that the son would gain fresh wisdom as to how to proceed towards meeting his political ambitions. The aim was not to dissuade the son from his political ambitions, but to keep him on track. It serves their joint interest of ensuring that power does not get out of their family”.

If this were correct it would mean that the issue of Presidency of Uganda is not an issue for the people of Uganda to decide but the three Generals – General Tibuhaburwa Museveni. General Salim Saleh Akandwanaho and General Muhoozi Kainerugaba. It would mean the NRM Party’s role is to create the impression that President Tibuhaburwa Museveni has been and continues to be in power by people’s choice.

Or else President Museveni would have summoned his top NRM leaders for a meeting to decide how to deal with the phenomenon of a serving military leader who is persistently and consistently showing ever accelerating interest in his chair.

One time in the early 1990s, President Tibuhaburwa Museveni told a journalist who sought an interview with him at his Kisozi farm that “Uganda has its owner”. He did not say “Uganda has its owners”, which would automatically mean Ugandans.

With the passage of time, it has emerged that “Uganda has its owner” did not apply to President Tibuhaburwa Museveni as such but to his family, which includes his half-brother, his children, his grandchildren, his wife and his sons of law and daughter in law. In fact, the President was cited in a Kenyan Tv interview stating that he works for himself, his family and his grandchildren.

The family has extensive business interests in the country. Some people say its business tentacles are widespread in East Africa. Even when the European Parliament was recently in conflict with the President of Uganda over human rights and economic segregation in the oil industry of Uganda, it emerged that the oil industry had become a family matter in keeping with the President’s repeatedly pronounced “My Oil”. This political attitude to the economy could be an extension of the attitude to power, which excludes alternative leaders from the Presidency at all costs.

Professor Peter Kagwanja, cited by BBC, News says, “That family (of President Tibuhaburwa Museveni) controls Uganda. His (Muhoozi Kainerugaba’s) mother is in the cabinet, and he is the prince, waiting to succeed his father,” Controlling the country means many things:

  1. It means controlling the thoughts, movements choices and even belonging of the people.
  2. It means disconnecting people from their time-tested lifestyles that were productive and culturally imparted social and economic security to local communities.
  3. It means disruption and distortion of the lives of citizens, sinking them further and further into income poverty for the benefit of a few people that have captured the country, State and the economy.
  4. It has meant that the historical, biological and cultural links of many indigenous groups of Ugandans, are distorted through land grabbing by a  small group of people belonging to nomadic-pastoralist human energy system. Consequently, the ecological-biological, socioeconomic and sociocultural aspects of the indigenous people are being distorted. Many people are now internal refugees in a country, which was once theirs, with no more linkage to the land.
  5. It means denial of the citizens many rights – political rights, human rights, right to development, right to a wholesome environment.
  6. It means narrowing opportunities for the absolute majority for the benefit of a few.
  7. It means infiltrating institutions consistently and persistently with closely related people belonging to one ethnic group
  8. It means exclusive governance whereby people not belonging to certain families of a group dominating the political and economic space marginalized and abused.
  9. It means total control over the health and education enterprises, with the majority of citizens either excluded from associated public services or afforded poor quality services.
  10. It means control over executive, legislative and judicial process.
  11. It means exclusive control over the national budget and increasingly diminishing allotment of adequate to the social sector
  12. It means exclusive control over natural resources.
  13. It means determining the futures of everyone in a way that benefits those in power and connected to power
  14. It means individualization of the crops of Uganda
  15. It means over reliance on loans to finance the economy.

Therefore, if as Professor Peter Kagwanja says the family of President Tibuhaburwa Museveni controls Uganda, then the President would be interested and happy to create circumstances that favour the status quo.

That then would give credence to claims that the President would like his only son, General Muhoozi Kainerugaba, to step in his shoes after he leaves the political and military stage. His almost deadening silence sends the signal that what General Muhoozi Kainerugaba is doing – marketing himself via tweets, just like former US President Donald Trump used to do, has his approval.

The country is paralyzed because there are laws made by President Tibuhaburwa Museveni’s government that disempower, depoliticize, deradicalize and deintellectualize Ugandans, leaving only members of his family to dominate the political and public spaces.

Such laws include the Sectarianism Law, the Anti-terrorism Law and the Political and Other Organizations Law. It is almost impossible for anyone or group of people not happy with the exclusionist political stance of the President’s family to publicly show discontent through the constitutionally allowed demonstrations.

Those laws are evoked at the slightest instigation. Sometimes when they are evoked, human life is lost. This has been integral to the status quo, which many think the President wants perpetuated well into the future. A Muhoozi Kainerugaba presidency, however ensured, is the most obvious way to propagate the status quo well into the future.

There is no doubt that General Muhoozi Kainerugaba is aware of what his father desires. He has reportedly said he respects his father. What he lacked was adequate exposure outside the family and the armed forces.

He was associated with the brutality of the armed forces, especially the Special Forces Command (SFC), whose job remains to secure the President’s family against Ugandans. Despite the negativity about some of his tweets, General Muhoozi Kainerugaba has been exposed far and wide, as Professor Peter Kagwanja suggests.

Many in East and Central Africa, the Nile Basin and Uganda, can say they have heard of General Muhoozi Kainerugaba and know a bit about his character. Kenyans will say they know him as the man who said he and his army can capture Nairobi in two weeks. They know that his father, President Tibuhaburwa Museveni apologized to Kenya, through President arap Ruto, although that did not calm the Kenyans.

Unfortunately, General Muhoozi Kainerugaba is in the public space when he is still a serving soldier.

This way, he is like Marshall Idi Amin Dada and General Tito Okello who never retired from the Army and continued to don military uniform while they ruled. His father, however, announced in 1996 when he offered himself for electoral office that he would never put on army uniform again, but has since then continued to don army unform. Whenever he is annoyed or wants to announce something of military nature, he dons army uniform.

Some Ugandans fear General Muhoozi Kainerugaba would supersede his father in ruthlessness, and would not let army uniform go off him. He has been in some of the worst war theatres in Somalia, Central African Republic and Democratic Republic of Congo in commanding positions.

His father once said his son was a child soldier in the Luwero Tringle. So, General Muhoozi Kainerugaba is war-hardened.  He has seen human blood flow with himself at the centre.

If for 36 years now President Tibuhaburwa Museveni has ruled by blood and iron, interspersed with electoral politics, he organized himself, always in his favour, many believe General Muhoozi Kainerugaba, the war hardened General, is likely to excel in brutality. These questions continue to reverberate:

  • Is General Muhoozi Kainerugaba already the leader of this generation of Ugandans as he claims?
  • Did this generation collectively agree to raise him to that status?
  • If he is the leader of this generation, dominated by the youths, then he needs not even present himself for electoral politics.
  • Could this be the reason why there are political maneuvers to de-enfranchise Ugandans through constitutional engineering so that a President is elected, not by the people, but their representatives in Parliament?

For God and My Country

The Writer Is a Ugandan Scientist And Environmentalist

DISCLAIMER: The Views expressed in article are solely for and belong to the author/ writer. They don’t reflect, portray or represent Accord Communications Limited, it’s affiliates, owners or employees. If you have a story in your community or an opinion article, let’s publish it. Send us an email via editorial@accordconsults.com or WhatsApp +254797048150

 

Ssegirinya-Ssewanyana Murder Case: Duel Between Power and Non-power?

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By Oweyegha-Afunaduula

The murder case in which two Members of Parliament in Kampala City are accused by the State as the master minds is another addition of such cases against high profile politicians during the long reign of President Tibuhaburwa Museveni.

The accused men are Ssegirinya Muhammad, elected Member of Parliament for Kawempe North, and Allan Aloysius Ssewanyana, elected Member of Parliament for Makindye Division West.  The murder case has elicited a plethora of feelings and interpretations within and outside the country.

Although many Ugandans in and outside the country think, believe and are convinced that the murder case preferred by the State against the legislators is a classical example of politically-engineered crimes, the State asserts that it has a good case for which it is still gathering evidence.

The two men have been behind the bars ever since they were elected to Parliament in January 2001. Murder is a capital offence in Uganda. If convicted one may only escape the gallows on prerogative of mercy by the President of Uganda.

Politically-engineered criminal cases are those which were never really committed by the accused but serve the interest of the State of keeping “political deviants” from the officially desired political stance in self-imposed denials, silence and fear of consequences in case they tried to contest for or contradict power.

There is a chain of such cases against political actors who tried to seek power, not through the barrow of the gun, but the ballot paper. There is also a big number of supporters of some politicians that have also fallen prey to politically-engineered crimes.

It should be stressed that the strategy of politically-engineered crimes is not an invention of the National Resistance Movement (NRM) regime. Those who have been around since colonial times will tell you that there were people who suffered at the hands of the State of Uganda and foreign States via politically-engineered crimes.

The unlucky ones, may just be arrested for treason or high treason, incarcerated for long periods of time and then released without charge. They are lucky if they appear before courts of law to defend themselves.

In some countries they are shot even before they appear before the courts of law. In Uganda, it is not rare for such people to appear before a military tribunal even with the connivance of the Judiciary.

Chris Rwakasisi, a former Minister in the Obote II government in the 1980s, spent 23 years in Luzira and was released by President Tibuhaburwa Museveni without ever appearing in Court.  I do not remember well, but Rwakasisi could have been the man in charge of security during Obote’s second reign.

If so then he was in direct conflict with the combatants of Luwero who emerged as the new rulers in Kampala and Kigali, Rwanda. For that he lost all his rights as a human being -especially the political rights. He has never been a politician again. I hear he is now a preacher of the gospel of Jesus Christ.

Madiba Mandela of South Africa, one of the founders of the African National Congress (ANC), was confined for 27 years by the then white racist government for organizing a politically-oriented, armed outfit against what came to be called the Apartheid regime.

South Africa was called Apartheid South Africa and the racist regime in power was called Apartheid regime because it segregated the numerically-dominant but politically-powerless black race of the country along ethnic lines.

ANC was politically criminalized by the racists. History, however, revealed that Madiba was destined to be the first Black African President of South Africa since the Boers arrived in the area 500 years earlier.

The racists released him from the Ocean-based Robben Island Prison, negotiated transfer of power to the black majority and ultimately handed the instruments of power to the former jail bird in 1992.

Musa Ssebirumbi, a fiery politician and unswerving supporter of Apollo Milton Obote’s Uganda People’s Congress (UPC) during the Luwero bush war times (1981-1986), did not escape the gallows at the order of the President of Uganda, Tibuhaburwa Museveni.

He may not have committed murder but was a party leader in Luwero during the time NRM/A was waging rebellion against the Obote II government. That could have been judged criminal by the combatants in power in Kamala who successfully sold the falsehood that they had liberated Uganda and Ugandans “from a Ugandan dictator”- Apollo Milton Obote – and Tito Okello who overthrew Obote’s government, paving the way for NRM/A to capture Uganda and the State on January 25 1986.

I do not think President Tibuhaburwa Museveni okayed another hanging after that of Musa Ssebirumbi. Therefore, Ssebirumbi stands the only historical example of political hanging in Uganda so far.

If President Tibuhaburwa Museveni had failed to capture the instruments of power, he would have qualified for trial as a high treason criminal since he and his military outfit (Patriotic Resistance Army, PRA), including so many refugees in its ranks, rebelled against an indigenous elected government, one month after Obote was sworn in as President.

When PRA joined hands with Yusuf Lule’s Uganda Freedom Fighters (UFF) to form the National Resistance Movement with the armed outfit – National Resistance Army – the bulk of the combatants were refugees carried over from the Front for National Salvation (FRONASA), which had organized militarily against the Idi Amin regime, and the PRA, which biologically speaking was a mutant of FRONASA, which was more or less the first guerilla group to launch militarized resistance against the Obote II regime.

Fortunate for President Tibuhaburwa Museveni, although many crimes were committed by the combatants just as government forces did in defense of the status quo, he captured the instruments of power, and could not use them against his combatants and himself.  It would take another regime to fix crimes against President Tibuhaburwa Museveni and his military outfit. But those would be real crimes, not politically engineered.

Now how should we characterize the Ssegirinya-Ssewanyana case? It is true many old people were killed in Masaka by panga-wielding assailants. However, it is not easy to explain why two successful politicians in Kampala would be interested in promoting murders in constituencies far away in Masaka where they are accused of having operated by remote-sensing.

One thing, however, is probably true. As Opposition candidates in Kampala, no doubt Ssegirinya and Ssewanyana could have been part of a group of Buganda politicians who were determined to ensure that President Tibuhaburwa Museveni and his NRM party were defeated in the region in the 2021 Presidential, Parliamentary and Council elections.

They could even have been vocal at the time urging voters to reject President Tibuhaburwa Museveni and his Party. I am not sure if they were politically-active and vocal in Masaka as much as they fomented murders in Masaka as the State continues to assert.

Apparently, no active Opposition politicians in Masaka, to my knowledge, have been linked to the crimes of Ssegirinya and Ssewanyana yet. Not even the Opposition leader in Parliament, Mathias Mpuga, who represents a constituency in Masaka, has been linked to the murderous acts of the two men.

This is strange. It is what has convinced some political and academic thinkers to hold that the case of Ssegirinya and Ssewanyana was politically-engineered against them to disconnect them from their voters who had overwhelmingly selected them to represent their interests and the public interest in Parliament.

Indeed, Ssegirinya and Ssewanyana represented their constituencies for a very short time in 2021 when the State preferred a murder case against them. the State, while ensuring they appear in court periodically, has all along made it a ritual to bring them out of prison and take them back.

This was unlike for Chris Rwakasisi who never saw a Court room during the 23 years he was incarcerated at Luzira Maximum Prison. Every time the two MPs are brought to Court, the State claims it is still gathering evidence. The freedom and political and democratic rights of the two men continue to be violated, and only the State knows when it will withdraw interest in the murder case.

As the World and Uganda prepare to celebrate the UN Day of Human Rights on 1Oth December 2022, we have a very good example of Uganda State abuse of the right to freedom and political and democratic rights of two high profile people whose complicity in murder is increasingly becoming difficult to prove. It is probably time, the ultimate judge, to absolve the two men, not people called judges. And time is God.

I personally belong to the school of thought which maintains that the case of Ssegirinya and Ssewanyana could be as criminal as the State puts it, but that, however, it is manifesting more as a duel between power and non-power.

The State has power and Ssegirinya, Ssewanyana and their voters have no power. He State has many ways of depicting its power. One of these is criminalizing citizens. Another is taxing citizens. Yet another is giving tax holidays to foreigners who invest in the country’s economy.

Ultimately, the case against Ssegirinya and Ssewanyana will end in their release, possibly with or without compensation. They will not be the first to be accused of serious crimes only to be released. Opposition leader and political activist Dr. Kizza Besigye was once accused of the equally serious crime of rape, paraded in court and eventually released.

I don’t know if he was compensated. Otherwise, the kind of treatment Dr. Kizza Besigye received at the hands of the State and the Courts of Law could have sunk him down into the deep sea of fear, silence and inactivity that could have been the aim of the State. It is only his determination that as kept him politically afloat.

He has since been arrested, released and re-arrested, according to him, for more than 40 times, because of his political activities, which perhaps amount to a mega-crime of interfering with the reign of President Tibuhaburwa Museveni.

I am not sure if Ssegirinya and Ssewanyana will have the resilience of Dr Kizza Besigye once they gain their freedom. What is true also is that their voters will begin doubting if it pays voting people who will never deliver most of the post-electoral period.

Perhaps also the signal the State – which is not easy to separate from the NRM Party – is sending to voters is that if they elect people who are not agreeable to it, it has the power to prevent them representing their constituents.

It is a duel between power and non-power. Those with and in power will act to express their power and those outside power or without power will be helpless, hopeless and hapless, when those in power are active.

In essence the vote itself is not powerful, nor does it confer power. It may create a pathway to power, but really the powerful empower themselves – incrementally. They choose why, how, what and when to deploy power far beyond the vote. Remember also what President Tibuhaburwa Museveni once told Ugandans in 1996: “A mere piece of paper cannot prevent me from having power—“.

For God and My Country.

The Writer Is a Ugandan Scientist And Environmentalist

DISCLAIMER: The views expressed in this article are solely for and belong to the author/ writer. They don’t reflect, portray or represent Accord Communications Limited, it’s affiliates, owners or employees. If you have a story in your community or an opinion article, let’s publish it. Send us an email via editorial@accordconsults.com or WhatsApp +254797048150

 

National Council Of Sports Undressed In Corruption Scandals

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The national council of sports, a government body mandated to develop, promote and control sports in Uganda has been under spot light over several issues from accountability to registering briefcase federations.

Last month, the minister of State Finance, Planning and Development (Privatization) Hon Evelyn Anita and Minister of State for Sports, Hon Peter Ogwang gave contradictory statements on the release of fund to the sports federations for the first and second quarters and it was revealed that National Council of sports was allocated Shs 47.81 billion for 51 federations across the county for the financial year 2022/ 2023.

Minister Anite Among said Shs19.2 billion was released for the first quarter while Ogwang said that Shs27 billion was released for the first  and second quarter. However, Moses Magogo (NRM, Budiope County East) the president of the Federation of Uganda Football Associations said sports federations had not received any fund for the two quarters.

Following inconsistences in statements regarding released funds to the council, Speaker after a motion moved by Bugiri Municipality legislator Asuman Basalirwa named the committee with Hon Laura Kanushu (NRM, PWD), Hon Solomon Silwany (NRM, Bukooli county central), Geofrey Kayemba (NUP, Bukomansimbi South County, Hon Iddi Isabirye (NRM, Bunya County south) Hon Donald Katalihwa (NRM, Mwenge county south), Hon.Agnes Achibu ( NRM, Nebbi district), and Margret Makhoka (Ind. Namayingo district).

While facing the ad hoc Committee on sports today, the president of the Uganda Boxing Federation Moses Muhangi shocked the members when he revealed that whereas they they request for about Shs600 Million for their international sports events from National Council of sports, they’re only given Shs45 but asked to account for 600 million which they are not received.

Muhangi also called for the re-instatement of of boxing in schools , saying this is killing grassroot boxing as they only rely on youths from the Ghetto who have passion for the sports.

DEVELOPING STORY: Museveni Announces New Strict Directives On Covid-19

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President has this evening in his address on health matters made new directions regarding the almost forgotten Covid-19 that silenced the world and brought it to knees in the year 2020 and 2021.

According to the ministry of Health, Uganda has been battling the Ebola Virus disease and the good news is that most of the patients if not all have been discharged projecting a sigh of relief and hope to people of Mubende and Kasanda districts which have been under lockdown for the past six weeks.

However, the president has directed and ordered that no one will be allowed in any public meeting without proof of vaccination of Covid-19, in this the president meant two jabs and another booster shot.

“A certificate of Covid-19 vaccination is a requirement for entrance into any public meeting (two doses and a booster dose)- said president Museveni

President Museveni further in his televised address re-awakened and re-emphasized wearing of masks for people in enclosed places and public gatherings. He also further directs that shaking of hands and hugging also remains prohibited because of Covid-19 and Ebola.

“Shaking hands and hugging remain prohibited. Hand shaking is totally prohibited because of corona and ebola and all those things” President Museveni

This is a developing story….

If you have a story in your community or an opinion article, let’s publish it. Send us an email via editorial@accordconsults.com or WhatsApp +254797048150

Accord Web Host Slashes Prices in Christmas Discount Drive

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Accord Communications Limited the mother company of Accord Web Host the leading web hosting company in Uganda have slashed all their web hosting package prices in their Christmas drive from November 25th up to January 15th to enable power business into the digital space.

According to the company’s marketing manager Mr.Evans Kalyango, the discounts are meant to help every business in Uganda and across the boarders to have access to the best web hosting services which are more reliable, secure and trusted by hundreds of clients already being hosting, buying domain names and designing their website with Accord Communications Limited.

“We want to help businesses access to reliable and secure web hosting services in this country and beyond, hope every business grabs this opportunity to have a website because it defines your digital presence of your brand identity”- Said Evans Kalyango.

Get the 30GB package at UGX170,000 from 200,000, 50GB at UGX290,000 from the UGX330,000, 100GB package now goes for UGX390.000 from UGX430,000 and the Unlimited package now goes for UGX580,000 from UGX650,000.

The all-in-one packages which include hosting, designing and Domain names have also been slashed from 650,000 to 55000 for small business, from 800,000 to 700000 for companies and from 1000,000 to 900000 for corporate agencies.

Check out all these packages at the company’s website https://accordhost.com/ , Accord Communication Uganda social media pages on Facebook, Twitter and LinkedIn. To search for your preferred domain name, go here https://accordhost.com/clients/cart.php?a=add&domain=register .

The offer is open to every business that desires to own a website like schools, hospitals, Community Based organizations, Non-Government Organizations, hotels, tour companies, news websites, blogs, personal websites among others.

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OWEYEGHA-AFUNADUULA: The Wasted And Lost Generation Of Busoga

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Oweyegha-Afunaduula

By Oweyegha-Afunaduula
According to Wikipedia the period between 20-and 30 years is the generation. If we take this to be the truth, then the President of Uganda, Tibuhaburwa Museveni, has ruled the country for a generation and more.

However, generation also means all the people of all ages living in this period. For the purposes of this article, I take the generation to cover 40 years; in this case, from 1982 to 2022.

The period 1982-2022 has been a period of wastage and loss – economically, financially, biologically, environmentally, professionally and in terms of indigenous belonging and ownership of the country.

Increasingly indigenous Ugandans have lost their country and its economy, step by step, to foreign sojourners some of whom have lived in the country for a long time, have recently migrated into the country or were even born in the country and now claim complete ownership and belonging at the expense of the bona fide indigenes.

It is during this generation when immigrant Indians, for example, have demanded to be included among the “indigenous groups of Uganda” and the President of Uganda has said he has no problem with that. It is also the generation when thousands of Chinese have flocked into the country -many illegally. However, unlike Indians, they have not yet demanded to be an indigenous group in Uganda. Indigenes are bitter.

The brief period of 1979-86 was wasted away by a bush war in which Rwandese refugees were central and nearly 500 Ugandans in what was called the Luwero Triangle lost their lives. It was a period of sociopolitical instability. Many young people died.

Many others were recruited by the Patriotic Resistance Army (which was a morph of Yoweri Museveni’s Front for National Salvation) and National Resistance Army -a result of amalgamation of Yoweri Museveni’s Patriotic Resistance Army and Yusuf Lule’s Uganda Freedom Fighters.

Many children were recruited between 1981 and 1986 as Kadogos (juvenile soldiers) to supplant the juvenile Obote II regime from power. No meaningful production, rehabilitation and reconstruction of the country took place. Many Ugandans fled the country to join those who had fled during the Amin era. Many of them have never come back due to persistent political instability and uncertainty.

A culture of militarism has since 1886 been deliberately established and popularized by the ruling NRM regime as an integral component of an alien political culture sown and entrenched on the basis of hatred and blame of past leaders for crimes they never committed.

The crimes were committed by those who removed them from power. Deceptively hatred and blame of past leaders have been sown in the brains of people born between 1980 and now in order to conceal the real people responsible for Uganda’s quagmire.

Most Ugandans born between 1980 and 2022 lack critical thinking and critical analysis skills. They hardly read or write critically or debate issues coherently and effectively. In fact, they hate reading, especially long articles, documents and books. Yet they are in the bracket of our new breed of leaders in every sphere of life.

They constitute our present teachers and lecturers. They hardly question anything. What the leader says or authors write is taken as gospel truth although they can question the Bible or the Quran. If there is anything useful going on in our churches, mosques, Cabinet, legislature or judiciary, school or universities it is by accident.

Most of these institutions are now under the influence of young people born between 1980 and 2022 – this generation. Increasingly most are cadres of NRM who adore the Chairman and take him as the only thinker. They are just good at singing praises of the President or glorifying and worshipping him, or implementing his choices without contradiction.

They only deal with simple things and avoid complex ones They are victims of the conspiracy of silence and of fear, which has been sown in the country by power. Under fear they resist alternatives in their heads and in anything. It is fear that has destroyed a once vibrant intellectual climate in the country, which used to encourage questioning and challenging the choices of power.

It is not surprising that all the country’s universities, including Makerere University, which used to be the bastion of intellectual activity, have relapsed into academicism, thereby letting down this and future generations. Intellectual capital undermined and academic capital entrenched, yet intellectual capital is the mainstay of real things and academic capital is the mainstay of unreal things! Another word for academic is unreal.

So, Uganda’s reality of today has squeezed intellectualism out and put academicism at its centre. It is a reality of conquest, consent, control and domination by power that was ushered in by a bush war in the early part of this generation.

I am not happy about my own six children born in this generation, although most of them have degrees, some with more than one degree. Only my daughter born in the very early 1970s is different.

Although a scientist, she can effectively engage in critical thinking and critical analysis, question and sustain discussion of difficult subjects, explore diverse angles of an issue while keeping God at the centre of her life.

Of course, my six children are part and parcel of the generation I have described and to which the majority of Uganda’s young people belong. Unlike the young people of the 1960s, young graduates of today have knowledge but not enough wisdom, understanding and insights to effectively discuss and analyse issues critically.

When they see someone engaged in critical thinking and analysis, they dismiss him as anti-government. Or else, they go to discussion of non-issues or seek for simplicity which they handle effectively. Such generation will worship, glorify and praise power even if they have been to university class.

They will see the lecturer or professor as a little god, just copy notes and memorize them to pass examinations and go away. Of course, when they go away, they will forget most of what they memorized and find they have to unlearn and relearn to fit in the reality outside university.

Unfortunately, graduates are relearning to detrimental ends because vices such as corruption are their choices. Ultimately, employment of the education enterprise is based on technical know who, not professionalism.

People who are employed on the basis of Technical Know Who are constrained by lack of necessary skills. They have no capacity to implement anything professionally.

This could explain why Parliament is not satisfied with the rate of implementation of its decisions by the Executive; why the quality of judicial decisions is falling meteorically; and why the quality of the civil service leaves a lot to be desired.
On the whole, discipline, patience, tolerance and respect are not integral to the young people of this generation.

They do not take easily to guidance and advice and get irritated when presented with alternatives. When they are more than 18 years of age, they can tell you that they are old enough to decide for themselves.

One young man of 27 whom my wife and I hired recently to stay at our farm and also help us at our homestead, told me, “Mzee, I am old enough and I have children and a wife. You don’t have to all the time tell me what to do or how to do it”. I was not surprised. These days most young people in the age bracket of 6-40 years resist being guided.

This young man does not fit to be my son but my grandchild. My last born is 32 and my first born is 51. Personally, I received a lot of knowledge, wisdom and guidance from my grandparents and always wanted to be by them to learn some new things.

These days if you offer advice or guidance to a young person, say about education, the child may report you to his or her parents, some fit to be your grandchildren or children. You will be lucky if the parents do not ignore your seniority and abuse you instead.

One parent told me, “You advise your own children. Leave mine alone.” even when he knew that my last child at school, the 32-year-old one, was at A-level in 2009.

In my village Nawaka, in Ikumbya Subcounty of Luuka District in Busoga, I am currently the oldest of my generation, and I have the largest number of educated children, with two of them having more than one degree and one of the two a university lecturer, like I was for many years.

However, I have been compelled to withdraw from inspiring the children of members of my village and clan to love education. I feel sorry for them but their parents don’t care. The children are a wasted and lost lot.

When I remember that many young men and women passed through my hands at primary, secondary and university levels, and many are serving society – at national, regional, continental and global levels in various capacities – I get extremely sad.

I am, well-positioned and obliged to guide the young parents of my Clan and village about education, but they are not impressed and will not let me to.

They prefer to do their things their way. When you advise parents about the value of education, they dismiss you as proud because your children are educated. If Jesus said that a prophet will not be recognized in his place of birth, I have lived to experience it. The educated are not loved or imitated but hated, avoided and maligned.

At worst they try as much as possible to lower you at their level or even below their level. You are lucky if every day they don’t connive to destroy your name as far and as widely as they can, as if that will remove the advantage of education you have.

One undoing of the educated of a village is that unlike their counterparts, they will feel lower compulsion to value extended family relationships, attend every burial or festivity or check on every sick person in the village or surrounding villages Time and energy seem to be limiting factors for the educated, although the educated that are politicians somehow find the time and energy.

For me I have the disadvantage that I spent almost 40 yeas from my village. I do not know most of the young people who now predominate my village and neighboring villages. It is unlike when I would know everyone in the village and neighboring villages, and even beyond, and had the time and energy to visit them. Villagers take long to perceive that times have changes and that the educated person among them also changed.

If they knew him or her before they see him or her in the old sense, and frequently do not respect him or her. So, they are unlikely to respect whatever advice he or she tells them. Yet in the past, restraint, constraint and respect were a matter of holistic community education. That was in the past.

It is different today. The community does not teach good or bad, if you take the current children as a measure of progress in education. Constraint, restraint and respect have almost disappeared, at least in my village.

Meanwhile, although in my father’s lineage we have tried to replicate the education success story in the Daudi Kintu Mutekanga lineage, it has become increasingly difficult as the cost of living rises supersonically.

Even then in Busoga, when people talk about education and educated people, they mention my Mulawa Clan, especially the Afunaduula Family. However, the Mutekanga lineage is by far superior because virtually all members of that lineage take education as a matter of life and death even if generally education in Busoga seems to be a thing of the past.

If Daudi Kintu Mutekanga rose from the dead he would relax with satisfaction reflecting on the great work he did in educating his children. Many grandchildren and grand grandchildren of his have sought and got education at the highest level and are serving humanity in many parts of the world.

I personally knew the late Professor Igaga Mutekanga, formally a Professor at Kenyatta University and Vice-Chancellor of Busoga University; and I know Professor David Bakibinga, formally Deputy Vice-Chancellor Makerere University, and Professor Emeritus Robert Bakibinga now a bureaucrat with the State of Pennsylvania, but formally a professor of Engineering at Pennsylvania State University.

The Lineage has accumulated some 12 PhDs so far and many other members are pursuing their Ph.Ds and Masters degrees. The lineage is the pride of Busoga as far as education is concerned, but if other lineages of Basoga tried to emulate it, they are falling behind, this century, which is sad. Busoga was the pride of Uganda in education.

Behind every problem is the problem of leadership. Busoga leaders, if they are to revive education enterprise in Busoga, have to take a leaf from the educational success story of the Daudi Kintu Mutekanga lineage. Education is the greatest challenge facing Busoga today although poverty has often been cited as the one.

The vast majority of my people of Mulawa Clan at Nawaka, Ikumbya Subcounty, Luuka District no longer care about education. I hear this attitude is now universal in the whole of Busoga region.

Parents have left responsibility for education almost entirely to Central Government’s Universal Primary Education (UPE) and Universal Secondary Education (USE), The school dropout rate at all levels of education in the village is extremely high.

The only children getting education up to university level are principally those of the children of the members of the Charles Afunaduula lineage and Silas Wekiya lineage. These lineages are experiencing extremely few school dropouts.

Like the Daudi Kintu Mutekanga lineage members, the Members of the Charles Afunaduula and Silas Wekiya Lineages are educating their children despite the very unfavorable socioeconomic and environmental conditions in Uganda.

They are agreed whatever the attempts to devalue education by emphasizing “Technical Know WHO” education is the key to several opportunities.
Therefore, if you educate your children, your children and grandchildren will also educate theirs.

Unfortunately, this having educated people and uneducated people in society creates division, in a country where society is politically being divided into smaller and smaller units for the political gain of the rulers.

A plethora of threats face the children of my village in particular and Busoga in general. One serious threat, an expression of poverty of mind and income, is early marriages among school dropouts. Busoga is known for having the largest threat of teenage marriages in Uganda.

Among the educated the threat is different. Many don’t want to marry and, therefore, ween off from their parents even when they have come of age. This is dangerous because reproduction and renewability of genealogies of Basoga families and Clans are endangered in the long-term.

And as I stated in another article on Busoga, very few educated children of Busoga want to build homes in the region. Therefore, they are not contributing to the development of Busoga in physical terms. They are contributing to the development of those regions, towns or cities outside Busoga where they are building homes, if at all.

Because of reduced emphasis on education, conflict generation is on the rise within and between families in Busoga. Within families, school dropouts who are boys are violently demanding land from their fathers so that they can sell it to buy boda boda to ferry passengers or goods from one place to another or to start other businesses for survival. Where the parents refuse, some of the school dropouts have killed them or even committed suicide.

One young man, who may not be remembering what he told me, when I asked him what he was going to do now that he had dropped out of secondary school, did not mince with words:

“I am waiting for my father to die, then I will sell some of the land, buy a motorcycle and go to Jinja or Kampala to do boda boda business”. Indeed, the young man who is 23 is waiting but his 80-year-old father has shown no sign of dying. I hope the young man will not kill him when he becomes impatient. He is not the only one talking foolishly. Many young men have a similar mindset.

If the NRM Government took technical training seriously, and did not close technical schools en masse, most of these young people would be absorbed and equipped with technical skills they would use to support themselves and their families.

When we hear of increasing suicides among the young people, despondency and redundancy, accompanied by frustrations and shame (towards girls) could be the explanation.

Government is not addressing the issue, preferring to concentrate on politics and to ostracize young people or characterize them as criminals. More and more prisons are being built to accommodate the young men, who are picked at will and accused of diverse crimes, including being idle and lazy.

It is a social bomb waiting to happen. Unfortunately, frequently Government confronts it militarily as if the young people are enemies of the State. Many have lost their lives in what others have characterized as human rights violations.

Non-governmental organizations (NGOs), which would have helped socially, have been incapacitated and restricted politically with stringent laws, such as the Political and Other Organization’s Law, and Terrorism Law, thereby working in and with fear or withdrawing altogether.

The youth crisis is being compounded by the fact that Uganda leads in having the fastest growing human population in the world. The youth numbers are rising, not falling, and burdening the shrinking, increasingly neglected segment of aging, old and elderly people.

Between families, young men deliberately develop conflicts over land, girls or women, even when they are still in the homes of their parents. Some may even fall in love with their step mothers or female spouses, thereby getting in direct conflict with their parents.

The conflicts, which are on the rise, may be fatal. If you listen to news on Television or Radio you get the impression that the survival of the family institution in Uganda is in serious danger of disintegrating.

Some young people, for luck of genuine income sources, are turning themselves into political hangers-on, doing political work for politicians for some peanuts to survive on, however briefly. However, they may lose their lives as did happen in Luuka District during the 2021 Presidential campaigns.

Curious young people and innocent standbys who wanted to listen to presidential Candidate Kyagulanyi Sssentamu were shot dead en masse, wounded or carried away to seclusive places known as safe houses. Many have not been accounted for.

Other despondent and redundant youths are turning to witchcraft or religion, not so much for spiritual development as for illusionary richness. They have fallen pray to prosperity preachers who promise them instant richness or visas to foreign countries.

Still others are taking to illicit drugs to postpone responsibility, and many deceive themselves that when they take the drugs their problems are solved. Besides, many young girls have, for lack of viable alternatives, taken to prostitution even at ages as low as 12 years. Pathetic!

Many youths have fallen prey to the international modern slave racket, whereby they are promised money and illusionary richness in Arab countries. Some of them are graduates who have failed to get gainful employment after walking Kamapala streets for long.

Increasingly, many have become victims of a related racket called “human organ trade” in which they lose their organs, especially their kidneys, that end up in the rich but sick people.

Many lose their kidneys through the work of criminal, unscrupulous medical personnel who want easy money at the expense of poor and needy Ugandans. However, others willingly accept to have one of their kidneys removed in order to get money and ostensibly escape poverty. Pathetic!

The outflux of young people to foreign countries, or to towns and cities domestically, is leaving only old and elderly people who have expired energy-wise to do agriculture. This could be one reason why the Government cannot effectively manage the national budget, and has to rely on incessant borrowing to even pay salaries for its workers.

In the past when young people were active enough in agriculture, the economic sector supported the national budget heavily. In particular, Busoga became so prosperous that it sustained a viable education system and even could lend money to Central Government and some foreign countries.

Today, however, the youth are unproductive and only pretend to do agriculture to tap into the money bonanzas Government pumps in to a select group of usually partisan individuals, ostensibly to pull the people out of poverty.

Many young people flock to market places towns and cities just to engage in betting, rumor-mongering or discussing football, politics, politicians or coming political duels. Usually, they are all the same, with no wise people among them to learn anything useful from.

Now that it is football season, and political campaigns are over, the greatest activities the youth are engaged in are football betting, watching and discussing football, not agricultural production. Many of the school dropouts hate animal husbandry, and poultry.

In Busoga scores of young men are seen daily either on foot or bicycles, flocking to sugarcane plantation to provide cheap labour in sugarcane cutting, while others are atop lorries carrying sugarcane.

Their job is to load sugarcane onto the lorries and offload sugarcane from the lorries. They prefer doing that to working on family farms. Most of them have become unruly and some of them indeed engage in crimes such as robberies, murder and rape.

Last, but not least, so many young school dropouts are exposed to biological, social and sexual aberrations, principally homosexuality and lesbianism. These are harming communities, their families and themselves health-wise – mentally, psychologically and physically.

Genetically and genealogically, they add no reproductive value to communities and families, since they end up being a wastage and loss These sociobiological aberrations have always been in society hideously, but these days they are popularized as human rights issues, which is anti-Christ.

So long as our generation continues to be wasted and lost, these aberrations will continue to be entrenched and even institutionalized or legalized in Uganda in particular and Africa in general because of mind poverty and income poverty. However, God will continue to abhor the aberrations as social evils of the type that led him to destroy Sodom and Gomorrah.
For God and My Country

The Writer Is a Ugandan Environmentalist And Scientist

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