{UAH} NOW THAT THE REVOLUTION IS DEAD, WHAT DO WE DO??
By Lineaker Kigunddu
After the revolution hitting a dead end due to a number of factors, Bobi Wine and his disciples have two realistic options.
One is to make peace with the NRA. This will save alot of lives and property that can be lost due to power struggles. Yoweri Kaguta Museveni can leave power but not in such tensional circumstances where people are promising to kick him out the Ghadaffi way. He rather dies on the throne than surending to some one who is going to take him straight to hell. But a serious talk can solve the matter where you will assure him that he is crime free, never to be tried in the courts of law, non of his properties grabbed away and no touching his family. Such enticing offers can tempt him you never know. But reporting him to the ICC, UN human rights courts etc put your chances of ousting him so far away from reality. The negotiations can work, in DRC President Kabila was smoothly romanced out of power, the same in Burundi with no bullet fired.
The second option is, you can wait for the old man to run down his clock. Museveni is an old and exhausted man whom may not be able to push on for the 15 or 20 years. On the other hand, Kyagulanyi is a very young man who can wait for Mzee to burn down his candle of life (other factors held constant). By the time M7 will turn 97, Kyagulanyi will just be 58 years old. So he can wait if Mzee refuses to negotiate.
Therefore, the odds are on Kyagulanyi's side and the young generation he represents. There is no need to worry, Museveni wont be burried with Uganda, he found it here and will leave it here. What I think these two options are better than going to the streets to battle with the NRA which you cannot defeat through violence. The NRA is stronger than you can imagine and its not a small task to think you can use anti people technics to grab power from it.
The biggest problem is when some of us write such things, you selfishly call us state agents who are wishing the opposition bad yet its not the fact. Its simply seeing things in a different way which doesn't make us ill wishers. Who amongst you wouldn't wish to see a smooth transition?
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-- After the revolution hitting a dead end due to a number of factors, Bobi Wine and his disciples have two realistic options.
One is to make peace with the NRA. This will save alot of lives and property that can be lost due to power struggles. Yoweri Kaguta Museveni can leave power but not in such tensional circumstances where people are promising to kick him out the Ghadaffi way. He rather dies on the throne than surending to some one who is going to take him straight to hell. But a serious talk can solve the matter where you will assure him that he is crime free, never to be tried in the courts of law, non of his properties grabbed away and no touching his family. Such enticing offers can tempt him you never know. But reporting him to the ICC, UN human rights courts etc put your chances of ousting him so far away from reality. The negotiations can work, in DRC President Kabila was smoothly romanced out of power, the same in Burundi with no bullet fired.
The second option is, you can wait for the old man to run down his clock. Museveni is an old and exhausted man whom may not be able to push on for the 15 or 20 years. On the other hand, Kyagulanyi is a very young man who can wait for Mzee to burn down his candle of life (other factors held constant). By the time M7 will turn 97, Kyagulanyi will just be 58 years old. So he can wait if Mzee refuses to negotiate.
Therefore, the odds are on Kyagulanyi's side and the young generation he represents. There is no need to worry, Museveni wont be burried with Uganda, he found it here and will leave it here. What I think these two options are better than going to the streets to battle with the NRA which you cannot defeat through violence. The NRA is stronger than you can imagine and its not a small task to think you can use anti people technics to grab power from it.
The biggest problem is when some of us write such things, you selfishly call us state agents who are wishing the opposition bad yet its not the fact. Its simply seeing things in a different way which doesn't make us ill wishers. Who amongst you wouldn't wish to see a smooth transition?
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"When a man is stung by a bee, he doesn't set off to destroy all beehives"
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