Skip to main content
museveni

President Yoweri Museveni’s Legacy Humble’s Uganda’s Opposition

Surprisingly, in the army council that sat in Gulu in 1988, Kizza Besigye was one of the statistics who opposed the restoration. Relatedly, the likes of Betty Nambooze have always wanted to appear as if they love the Kabaka more than the restorer, Yoweri Museveni
posted onJuly 13, 2024
nocomment

By Amb. Henry Mayega

As President Yoweri Museveni’s legacy continues to disconcertingly drown out Uganda’s opposition, a recent Africa-wide research declared the country number 2 on the continent in terms of democratic rankings. Simultaneously, a fete was recently organized at Kololo ceremonial grounds to honor the President’s legacy and stellar contributions to Uganda’s economic development and political stability.

The President has, over the years, assumed a string of electoral wins; right from 1996 through 2001, 2006, 2011, and 2016 to 2021, he has made elections predictable and regular; a departure and norm-shattering iteration away from our checkered history devoid of democracy. Why have they incessantly elected him? Because citizens have prized his solid record and legacy typified in the following:

First, rather than sit drably in the droughty corridors of power, the Yoweri Museveni administration restored Uganda to the international files of honor by reinstating peace, stability, and security in a once pariah country it had become before 1986. The unseemliness of the opposition who characteristically argue against this thesis astound nobody given their finite space on Uganda’s political canvass. This administration obliterated all of Uganda’s rebel groups, pacified the country, and up its sleeves, it boasts of helping with enforcing and keeping peace in the DRC, Somalia, and South Sudan amongst others because you can’t give what you do not have.

Secondly, this administration, rather than upend the precepts of the already heated up national political climate by 1986, choreographed and effected decentralization in Uganda thereby devolving power from the center to the periphery. Thus, new terms - decentralization and power-sharing, were added to Uganda’s political architecture of governance thereby mobilizing citizens for development. Many responsibilities hitherto shouldered at the center are now obligated to peripheral leaders.

Thirdly, the women folks who were hitherto confined to the kitchen environment have, for the first time, taken up prodigious leadership roles such as Vice President, Speaker, etc. Ugandans ought to remember this administration’s progressive policy interventions of: 1.5 mark added to females’ scores to massif admission to the university; the district women MPs; national women council, women representatives at local councils, 30% executive representation in all registered political parties, etc. Uganda’s women's emancipation stratagem did not descend from heaven; it was well-calibrated, time-tested, and implemented initially during the 1980-1986 Bush War struggle. It got the stamp of approval and was executed once this administration took government in 1986. The conflicted opposition orbit comprised of Bobi Wine, Kizza Besigye, and ilk will, characteristically, not agree because to them Yoweri Museveni is exhausting all the possible achievable national goals leaving no gaffes for them to use against him.

Fourth, in both the health and education sectors, this administration has outperformed all its predecessors combined; it has refurbished the 5 National and 13 regional Referral Hospitals, and built health centers: IIs (3364), IIIs (1570), and IVs (222), implemented the robust immunization program amongst others. Museveni’s haters may not agree but the massification of education opportunities through UPE, USE, and higher education loan schemes, revamping Technical Vocational Education and Training (TVET) and construction of county-based secondary schools have been the handwork of this administration to shore up access to basic services to citizens.

Fifth, in terms of development infrastructure, this administration has convincingly outmatched all former governments put together including our colonizers; from a paltry slightly over 1000 km (1986) to the current 7500 (2022) tar-macadam road network is an astronomical achievement in terms of revamping infrastructure. The few heretics who are crosswise with his administration have largely been shunned because of the huge political delta between what they say and what Uganda’s bombastic voters has seen this President do.

Lastly, the restoration of traditional rulers in regions that revere them, restitution of their assets and the passage of the law that provides for and protects them from political predators speak to this administration’s desire to put out the blazing political embers in all senses. Surprisingly, in the army council that sat in Gulu in 1988, Kizza Besigye was one of the statistics who opposed the restoration. Relatedly, the likes of Betty Nambooze have always wanted to appear as if they love the Kabaka more than the restorer, Yoweri Museveni.

 

Amb. Henry Mayega

Counsel General

Dubai, UAE

 

About Author

Kp Reporter - Chief editor

Join the conversation

Restricted HTML

  • Allowed HTML tags: <a href hreflang> <em> <strong> <cite> <blockquote cite> <code> <ul type> <ol start type> <li> <dl> <dt> <dd> <h2 id> <h3 id> <h4 id> <h5 id> <h6 id>
  • Lines and paragraphs break automatically.
  • Web page addresses and email addresses turn into links automatically.