UAH is secular, intellectual and non-aligned politically, culturally or religiously email discussion group.


SV: {UAH} The Observer - Tracing Museveni's friends



Ndugu WBK and UAH folks,
Quite a good question, but let me hastened to say that, you yourself can even be one of some sort of a journalist like MOSES KHISA or Dr MUNIINI Mulera from Canada!
I do not think, the media house particularly the ones which is DP oriented can fail to give you a wonderful weekly or dailies page!
I am saying this because you are quite critical on everything written by the YKM - dominated media house though you talk at time quite warm about the regime of YKM! 

Ocaya pOcure






Den måndag, 29 september 2014 17:20 skrev Gook <grakanga@gmail.com>:


WBK,
It's a real shame! Notice that in the list of his friends they listed Akena Pojok as dead!


Sent from Gook's iPatch!


"What you are we once were, what we are   you shall be!"
An inscription on the walls of a Roman catacomb.

On 29 sep 2014, at 16:06, WB <kyijomanyi@hotmail.com> wrote:

 
Folks:
 
Who is the leading political journalist in Uganda today? I ask because Ugandans are being fed garbage and the editors seem too lazy to question their journalists so anything gets printed.
 
 
WBK
 

 
Date: Mon, 29 Sep 2014 07:41:55 -0400
Subject: {UAH} The Observer - Tracing Museveni's friends
From: ocennekyon@gmail.com
To: ugandans-at-heart@googlegroups.com




The Observer - Tracing Museveni's friends

Sunday, 28 September 2014 20:18
Written by Sulaiman Kakaire
President Museveni with Kirunda Kivejinja addressing a UPM rally in 1980
Presidency appears to be Museveni's only real friend as old allies either die or they are cast by the wayside, writes Sulaiman Kakaire.President Museveni once said in a 1994 newspaper interview that he had no friends. Of course the president is a politician. And politicians, we are told, have no permanent friends or permanent enemies, only permanent interests.
Still, there were people who seemed (and believed they were) so close to Museveni you could be forgiven for thinking of them as his friends. But you would be wrong. The September 18 sacking of Amama Mbabazi as prime minister has further diminished the group of Museveni's long-term confidants still working with him.
Mbabazi, 65, had worked closely with Museveni since the early 1970s. The president even credits Mbabazi for reviving the internal network that fought Idi Amin when it almost collapsed around 1974. In his book, "Sowing the Mustard Seed," a chronicle of his political journey from his youthful days up to 1996 when Uganda held the first universal suffrage elections under NRM, Museveni lists his friends and foes.
A review of Museveni's book by this newspaper found that of the nearly 200 people he mentions, 158 belonged to what the president called friendly forces in the struggle while 29 can be referred to, in the context of the book, as enemy forces. The names on the "enemy list" include; former presidents Apollo Milton Obote, Idi Amin Dada, Tito Okello Lutwa and Godfrey Lukongwa Binaisa.
Our review also found that 85 of the 158 'friendly forces' – made a significant contribution to Museveni's political journey. Among the significant contributors are people Museveni met in school and during his early political activism campaigns. They include Martin Mwesiga (RIP), Black Mwesigwa (RIP), Eriya Kategaya (RIP) and Valeriano Rwaheru (RIP), who he met in the 1950s as a student at Kyamate primary school and Ntare School.
At Dar es Salaam University, Museveni also met people like the late Dr John Garang and James Wapakhabulo (RIP) who participated fervently in the University Students African Revolutionary Front to discuss Africa's problems. During that time, they would invite political scholars like Walter Rodney to provide insights into some of the problems that the world's post-colonial states were facing.
"This was during the time he (Rodney) was writing 'How Europe Underdeveloped Africa'," Museveni notes.
The president mentions Kategaya and Martin Mwesiga as some of those who participated in the discussions. When he graduated from university, Museveni in the late 1960s joined "progressive voices" within the UPC such as Raiti Omongin (RIP), Kirunda Kivejinja, Dani Wadada Nabudere (RIP), Bidandi Ssali, Zubairi Bakari (RIP), Richard Kaijuka and Magode Ikuya.
In 1971, when Amin assumed leadership, Museveni mobilised some Ugandans under Fronasa to fight the dictatorship. They included Kategaya, Amanya Mushega, Ruhakana Rugunda, Maumbe Mukhwana, Haruna Kibuye (RIP) and Abwooli Malibo (RIP). Others that Museveni cooperated with under Fronasa include Mbabazi, Kahinda Otafiire, James Birihanze, Kahunga Bagira, Augustine Ruzindana, Salim Saleh, Fred Rwigema, Ivan Koreta, Chefe Ali, Chango Machyo, Sam Njuba and Sam Katabarwa.
During the 1980 NRA bush war, Museveni acknowledges to have worked with, among others, people like Fred Rubereza (RIP), Gen Elly Tumwine, Tadeo Kanyankore (RIP) and Dr Kizza Besigye.

Current relationship

Our analysis of Museveni's friends reveals that of the 85 great contributors to Museveni's political journey, only 35 are alive. Of these, 26 still work with Museveni while nine are in the opposition. Nine of Museveni's former friends fell out with the president due to their opposition to his long stay in power. These include Mushega, Augustine Ruzindana, Col (rtd) Dr Kizza Besigye, Jaberi Bidandi Ssali, Colonels Samson Mande and Anthony Kyakabale.
Besigye left Museveni's government after he refused to address his call for reforms on governance. He has since stood three times against Museveni and remains the leading opposition player. Mushega, Ruzindana and Bidandi parted ways with Museveni following the latter's push for the removal of presidential term limits.
Some of Museveni's friends who are dead disagreed with Museveni in their last days. Among these are Nabudere, Sam Kalega Njuba, Kanyakore and his childhood friend Kategaya. In his book, "Impassioned For Freedom," the late Kategaya expressed his disappointment with Museveni's about-turn on stepping down from power.
On pages 131-132, Kategaya writes; 
"Of late, I have been told that politicians are people without a sense of shame. All along I trusted President Museveni whenever we agreed on what to do but the kisanja project (deletion of two term limits) has shaken my faith in him. It is not only President Museveni who has shaken my faith and trust in leaders but some of my colleagues in cabinet are equally guilty. It seems the survival instinct overrides everything else."
Although Kategaya was dropped from cabinet for his stand, he was eventually recalled after making his own U-turn. Njuba and Bidandi also wrote in their autobiographies about how they were forced to leave government for questioning the lifting of term limits.

Play safe

From available statistics, it seems the safest way to remain within Museveni's inner circle is not to express interest in the presidency or even criticise Museveni, his family or the UPDF – which he sees as the regime's ultimate guarantor. Almost all of Museveni's close comrades who have continued to work with him have played safe politics or not posed a threat to his power.
The 26 friends still living today include Prime Minister-Designate Rugunda, Maj Gen Kahinda Otafiire, the minister for Justice and Constitutional Affairs, and Gen Elly Tumwine, a UPDF MP. Others are Kirunda Kivejinja, Kintu Musoke, Gen Ivan Koreta and his brother Gen Salim Saleh. So, to stay with Museveni, one has to identify and take care of his permanent interest, which can now be presumed to be his presidency.

Where Museveni friends are

Name 
Year of meeting for politicsWhere are they now
Martin Mwesiga1953He was killed in Mbale
Eriya Kategaya1953Died in 2012. By the time of his death he was serving as First Deputy Prime Minister and minister for East Africa Community Affairs.
Black Mwesigwa1953Died during the unsuccessful invasion of September 1972
Valeriano Rwaheru1950sKilled by a grenade that exploded in his hands when he was attacked by Amin's soldiers in 1974
James Wapakhabulo1960sDied in 2004; served as minister for Foreign Affairs
John Garang1960sDied in a plane crash in 2005
John Kawanga1960sHe is currently in private practice and a member of DP
Prof Dani Nabudere1960sDied in 2012. By the time of his death he was mobilising a citizen led movement to call for governance reforms
Kintu Musoke1960sRetired politician but currently working as Special Presidential Advisor
Jaberi Bidandi Ssali1960sHe stood against Museveni in the 2011 presidential elections and is president of People's Progressive Party
Kirunda Kivejinja1960sHe is a Special Presidential Advisor and member of NRM's Central Executive Committee
Raiti Omongin1960sDied during the unsuccessful invasion of September 1972
Richard Kaijuka1960sA silent member of the FDC
Erifazi,Laki1960sDied
Yuda Katundu1960sDied
Abbas Kibazo1960sDied
Zubairi Bakari1960sDied
Ikuya Magode1960sRetired and member of NRM NEC
Amanya Mushega1971He is FDC vice president in charge of Western Uganda
Ruhakana Rugunda1970sPrime Minister
Maumbe Mukhwana1970sRetired farmer in Mbale
Haruna Kibuye1970sDied
Haruna,Bakari1970sDied
Akena P'Ojok1970sDied
Abwooli Malibo1970sWas arrested in one of the tea rooms in Kampala, executed in Fort Portal in 1973
James Karambuzi1970sExecuted by Amin in 1973
Joseph Bitwaari1970sWas publicly executed By Amin In 1973
Samuel Kagulire Kasadha1970sWas the estate engineer at Makerere killed by Amin in 1972
Edward Rugumayo1970sRetired and currently at the Mountain of the Moon University in Fort Portal
Obitre Gama1970sDied
William Ndahendekire1970sDied
James Birihanze1970sHe was found dead after the Kyambogo incident when Amin soldiers surrounded Rwaheru and James Karuhanga
Kahunga Bagira1970sKilled during the unsuccessful invasion of September 1972
Samora,Machel1970sDied in 1986
Augustine Ruzindana1970sOpposition—deputy secretary general in charge of research in FDC
Mpiima Kazimoto Wukwu1970sHe was killed during the first Fronasa attack in Mbale
Joseph Bitwari1970sWas arrested and publicly executed in his home town of Kabale in 1973
James Karambuzi1970sWas arrested and publicly executed in their home town of Kabale
William Nkoko1970sExecuted in Jinja in 1973
James Mbigiti1970sDied
James Karuhanga1970sAmin's soldiers publicly executed him
--
UAH forum is devoted to matters of interest to Ugandans. Individuals are responsible for whatever they post on this forum.To unsubscribe from this group, send email to: ugandans-at-heart+unsubscribe@googlegroups.com or Abbey Semuwemba at: abbeysemuwemba@gmail.com.


Sharing is Caring:


WE LOVE COMMENTS


Related Posts:

0 comments:

Post a Comment

Popular Posts

Blog Archive

Followers