Family rule in Uganda
Wednesday, 11 March 2009 08:16
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In his inaugural address as professor of
history at Makerere University on June 18, 1986, the highly respected Ugandan
historian, Samwiri Karugire, spelt out the problems of Africa. In a lecture
titled “Wind of Change or Merely Change in the Wind?
African Polities since Independence,â€
Karugire said the biggest ills of our continent are “numbing corruption and
nepotism.â€
“It is
because of these gross malfeasances,†Karugire
reasoned, “that our rulers become insecure in their sumptuous offices and
therefore they must surround themselves with their own relatives with whom, of
course, they loot the national treasury.â€
Quoting
journalist David Lamb, Karugire said: “The slain President William Tolbert of
Liberia, when he was president of that country, made his brother Frank,
president of the senate; another brother Stephen minister of finance; his
sister Lucia was appointed mayor of the city of Bentol; one of his sons
Ambassador at Large, his daughter Wilhemina presidential physician; his niece
Tula, presidential dietician; his three nephews respectively, assistant
minister for presidential affairs, agricultural attaché in Rome and vice
governor of the national bank; his four sons in-law respectively, minister of
defence, deputy minister of works, commissioner for immigration and board
member for Air Liberia. One brother-in-law was appointed to the senate, another
as ambassador to Guinea and yet another as mayor of the capital city,
Monrovia.â€
Tolbert was
behaving like African despots of his time like Marshal Mobutu Sese Seko of then
Zaire, Daniel arap Moi of Kenya, Omar Bongo of Gabon, Gnasingbe Eyadema of
Togo, Obiang Ngwena of Equatorial Guinea, etc. So has Uganda gone through a
wind of change or a mere change in the wind in regard to these African
political practices? If he were still alive today, what would Karugire say
about President Yoweri Museveni’s Uganda especially given that his son, Edwin
Karugire, is married to first daughter, Natasha?
Anatomy of family
rule
Previously
a critic of political patrimony, there is growing concern even among those
closest to him that Museveni is treading the long trodden path that Karugire
condemned 23 years ago. For example, Museveni has appointed his wife, Mrs Janet
Museveni, as state minister for Karamoja; his brother, Gen. Salim Saleh,
formerly a minister of state for micro finance, as Senior Presidential Advisor
on defence, a job at the same rank as a cabinet minister; his brother-in-law,
Sam Kutesa, minister of foreign affairs; his son, Muhozi Keinerugaba, commander
of the Special Forces, his daughter Natasha Karugire, Private Secretary to the
president in charge of Household.
Museveni
has also appointed his nephew, Joseph Ekwau (son of his younger sister Violet
Kajubiri), Private Secretary to the President in charge of Medical Services
(HIV//AIDS); his sister Miriam Karugaba as Administrator at State House (she is
semi-literate) and her husband (therefore Museveni’s brother-in-law), Jimmy
Karugaba, as Officer in Charge (OC) of the Accounts Department at State House.
Museveni has also appointed his sister-in-law, Jolly Sabune, Executive Director
of Cotton Development Authority, his niece-in-law, Hope Nyakairu,
Undersecretary for Administration and Finance at State House, his cousin Bright
Rwamirama, State Minister for Animal Husbandry, his other cousin, Faith Katana
Mirembe, Assistant Private Secretary in charge of Education and Social Services
and Justus Karuhanga, Private Secretary to the President in charge of Legal
Affairs who is a nephew to Mrs Museveni.
There is no
doubt that people like Saleh and Kutesa merit their positions. Saleh is a war
hero who distinguished himself as a brilliant and brave rebel commander while
Kutesa is one of the veteran politicians on Uganda’s political scene. But
equally Uganda has many competent people who can perform their roles. If the
president sought to avoid being accused of nepotism, there was enough talent to
choose from to make public appointments.
Many
observers say that increasing family influence in government has gone hand in
hand with the informalisation of power. Thus, although formal authority is
vested in official institutions, effective power is wielded by this informal
clique of family and kin. The official structure presents a semblance of
national ethno-regional and religious diversity to win the regime legitimacy.
The informal but highly powerful structure of the closest of the president’s
family and kin is the “real†government.
Replicating
Africa’s curse
Apparently,
this reflects the shift of attention from the promise of “fundamental
change†to the slogan of “no change†that has
become the rallying cry of regime functionaries. The informalisation of
power in Uganda echoes other African countries. One example is Donor Cruise
O’Brien’s 1975 book on politics in Senegal: Saints
and Politicians. According to O’Brien, politics in Senegal is
organised through factions, otherwise called “clans.†But the
clan in Senegalese politics is not defined by kinship although that may exist
and help reinforce political solidarity within a given political group.
Instead,
O’Brien writes, “the clan†is basically
a “political faction operating within the institutions of the state and the
governing party; it exists above all to promote the interests of its members
through political competition, and its first unifying principle is the prospect
of material rewards of political success. Political office and the spoils of
office are the very definition of success: loot is the clanic totem.†Sounds like Uganda today?
In his 1979
article The Administration of Underdevelopment,
David Gould revealed a similar practice in Mobutu’s Zaire. He argued that
power was organised at the very top around a “presidential clique.†This was composed mainly of about 50 of the president’s “closest
kinsmen†whom Mobutu trusted. They occupied the most sensitive and lucrative
positions of state like “head of the Judiciary Council, Secret Police,
Interior Ministry, President’s Office and so on.†In his
last days, Mobutu’s son Nzanga was a presidential advisor while another,
Kongolo, was commander of the dreaded Special Presidential Division
(DSP).
Next to the
kinsmen/women, Gould revealed, was the “presidential brotherhoodâ€! Though not from the president’s ethnic group, their positions
depended on their personal ties with Mobutu and his clique. Is Uganda’s power
structure moving towards Mobutu’s Zaire? It already has; our equivalent of
the brotherhood would include people like Security Minister, Amama Mbabazi. So
much is the level of patrimony in Museveni’s presidency that many Ugandans
wonder how a man who publicly despised Mobutu and that generation of African
dictators could have so easily gone the same way; the way none of his
predecessors Milton Obote or Idi Amin can be accused of having gone.
Why family rule?
For Dr
Oloka Onyango, a Makerere University lecturer and head of the Human Rights and
Peace Centre (HURIPEC), the signs were always there from the very beginning
that this is the way it would be.Â
“Museveni’s
policy has always been to construct personal rule, not institutional rule. He
has destroyed all institutions. And you could see this from the very
beginning,†Dr Oloka told The Independent, adding; “This is
the trajectory he took from 1989 – consolidation and marginalisation. So when
you take that course, you have very few options especially in the new
international setting i.e. who can best insulate you from the International
Criminal Court (ICC) if not family [son and brother].
Oloka said
that the problems former Zambian President, Frederick Chiluba has faced at the
hands of his successor and presumed protégé, Levy Mwanawasa and problems
former Malawian President Bakili Muluzi is facing at the hands of his chosen
successor, Bingu wa Mutharika mean you cannot trust your successor except
family. “There are very few Moi-like successors,†Oloka
said, “So you rely on those who have 150% loyalty and these are blood
relatives. For Museveni, there are only two people he can trust – Saleh and
his son Muhoozi.â€
Indeed this
is a view shared more or less by Charles Onyango-Obbo, a senior Ugandan
journalist based in Nairobi and probably the country’s foremost political
commentator. “One reason Museveni ended up with so many relatives in key
security positions, is that fairly early in his presidency he sought to entrench
his power by limiting the independent growth of his party, the NRM, and to
dismantle the institutions of state (which he had, admittedly, helped rebuild
considerably because he needed them for the reconstruction effort in his first
10 years in power). But one can never govern without organised institutions,
and a force you can rely on to counter challenges to your authority. That is
how, among other reasons, the security forces became the bedrock of
Museveni’s power,†Obbo told The Independent in a telephone
interview from Nairobi.
Like his
erstwhile colleagues, the military has inevitably been the focus of
Museveni’s patrimony. According to a survey carried out by The Independent last year and
published in its Issue 4 (Jan. 25 – Feb. 7, 2008), 74 per cent of the 23 top
command positions in the “national†army, Uganda
People’s Defence Forces (UPDF), are held by officers from Museveni’s
western region. Other regions like Buganda (central) hold 17 per cent, the
north 9 per cent and the east zero per cent! All the five full generals
in the UPDF – Yoweri Museveni, David Tinyefuza, Elly Tumwine, Salim Saleh and
Aronda Nyakairima are from the president’s sub-ethnic group, the Bahima.
While the
president has often attributed this imbalance to historical circumstances of
his NRA rebellions that started with mostly his tribesmen, pundits say almost
40 years since he started his struggle in 1971 should have been more than
enough to rectify the imbalance. Instead, they point to a systematic attempt to
cement a patrimony.
“Once he
dismantled state institutions and stifled the party,†says
Obbo, “within the security apparatus, he needed a rationale for apportioning
power inside it. Since he had turned his back on meritocracy in the public service
and politics, he could not run the security services based on meritocracy.
Because the security services lacked the diversity of the NRM party, and there
was little or no direct disloyalty to Museveni, he could only use a subjective
criterion to allocate authority in the security services, and so he went tribal
in a general sense, and in very key jobs, he relied on the family. Narrow as
these are, they still represent some kind of criteria – blood relationship.â€
How has it been
possible?
The question
many people will ask is how Museveni, without the advantage enjoyed by early
African dictators who inherited the colonial machinery amidst illiteracy,
poverty, ignorance and lack of institutions, could have successfully built a
patrimony in this age of democracy and enlightenment?Â
“Historically,
family dictatorships largely exist in states that are weak; the elite leaders
are not organised and there is lack of a common national consciousness. This is
exactly what is in Uganda now and that is why Museveni is able to use family
rule without fear,†leading Kampala lawyer David Mpanga
told The Independent.
Dr Oloka
agrees that there are few institutional checks to hold Museveni accountable
because it was not envisaged during the constitutional making process how the
extent of abuse could go. “State House is uncontrolled like intelligence;
there are no controls on the president so it’s the president’s plaything,†he says.
But for
veteran politician Jaberi Bidandi Ssali, who co-founded the Uganda Patriotic
Movement (UPM) with Museveni in 1980 and served as minister in his NRM
government from 1986 to 2003, Museveni has taken this course not simply because
of weak institutional safeguards but also because the president lacked
political grooming.
“The
fundamental problem Museveni has is the fact that he never had an opportunity
to associate with elders in politics when he was still in his youth, his
formative stage; leaders like Ignatius Musaazi, Engulu and the Bikangagas. He
has always looked at politics in terms of him becoming the leader and in the
process lost out on the possibility of guidance. Instead of learning from them
he has always been trashing them one by one. Museveni is a politician who ran
out of school, served in government, learnt how to fire the gun and then shot
himself into power. And that is why he is using family rule with impunity. He
seems to be the ‘I-know-it-all, solve-it-all, giver of jobs and the fountain
of favours’,†Bidandi says.
The uses of family rule
While opinion
is divided as to whether President Museveni’s institution of a
neo-patrimonial regime was an act of omission or commission, there is unanimity
as to how much this system has helped him retain power for so long, writing
himself in the books of history as the longest serving leader the country has
had. Neo-patrimonial regimes survive because of a combination of factors like
patronage, coercion, blackmail, bribery, etc. It is a strategy that was well
learned by the Museveni regime.
“Apart
from his tactic of rewarding the southern middle class, this reliance on family
actually helped Museveni,†says Obbo. “In
the short term, it reduced the level of discordance in the inner sanctum of
power. Secondly, it created a fairly large constituency in the security
establishment that had both a subjective and objective interest in Museveni’s
survival.â€
Thus, the
way Maj. Okwiri Rabwoni [late Brig. Noble Mayombo’s renegade brother] was
handled in 2001 at Entebbe Airport and the shameless way former presidential
candidate Col. Kizza Besigye was treated in 2005/06, that disregarded all law
and the image of regime are embedded in this neo-patrimonial system.
“A
professional security officer wouldn’t do those things out of partisan
reasons,†Obbo has reasoned, “He needs
something additional– a primordial fear that a Besigye regime would punish
you and all your family because you are blood relatives of Museveni –
to provoke that extreme response in defence of the man. The best way to
understand this is that while Amin killed far more people than the Museveni
regime, we never saw people like Chief Justice Ben Kiwanuka, Archbishop Janan
Luwum, Vice Chancellor Frank Kalimuzo, etc brutalised publicly. They were taken
to Namanve or the Nakasero State Research Bureau dungeons and brutally murdered
out of public sight.â€
According
to Obbo, the reason is that Amin had many tribesmen in his service, but not
relatives. The irrational fear of loss of privileges that drives Museveni
loyalists to be excessive in public because they feel the whole family is
threatened is one that didn’t afflict the Amin regime. That cohesiveness,
Obbo believes, has allowed Museveni to hold things longer than all Uganda’s
previous post-independence regimes combined.
Obviously, the
military alone cannot guarantee survival of the regime so it is imperative to
build a patrimony in business and in politics, especially in light of the
increasing need to use money to buy political support. Thus the president has
many of his relatives and in-laws well placed in legitimate business.
Some of the
most prominent include Hannington Karuhanga, chairman UGACOF, a leading coffee
exporting company and chairman of Stanbic Bank. He is a cousin to Mrs Museveni
and is also married to a sister to the Chief of Defence Forces Gen. Aronda
Nyakairima. Although Karuhanga has made his mark on the business scene through
personal hard work, his connections to the first family and the likely benefits
it offers have not gone unnoticed.
Mrs Jovia
Saleh: A wealthy business lady who is into real estate and a host of other
businesses is wife of the younger brother to President Museveni, Gen. Saleh.
Her sister Kellen Kayonga, is an accomplished business lady in this country;
she recently won the lucrative deal of exporting security guards to the
troubled Iraq through a security company Askar. She is the young sister to
Jovia Saleh and therefore a sister-in-law to Gen. Saleh.
Odrek
Rwabwogo: The proprietor of Terp Consults, a public relations company that has
handled some of the government’s biggest events and programmes, the most
notable being the $1 million ‘Gifted by Nature’ campaign on CNN and the
Commonwealth Heads of Government Meeting (CHOGM). He marries Museveni’s
daughter Patience. Of course other relatives like Kutesa, who owns Entebbe
Handling Services (ENHAS) straddle the space between business and politics.
Museveni’s
relatives’ pre-eminence in business, says Dr Oloka, is not only “an attempt
to distance himself from personal corruption i.e. that it is those around him
that are corrupt,†but has also been dictated by the
current economic trends. Thus whereas in the past generation regimes used state
corporations to build their patronage network, liberalisation has left the
current generation of patriarchs with limited options. “Now Museveni
must employ them directly in government and in State House, or let them play a
big role in business,†he says.
Be that as
it may, the president’s relatives can still be traced in the few remaining parastatals
and public statutory bodies. For instance, Don Nyakairu, the Corporation
Secretary of Uganda Telecom Ltd (UTL), is husband to Mrs Museveni’s cousin
Hope Nyakairu at State House.Â
Where will it all
end?
“No
regime of patronage except perhaps Togo’s Eyadema has survived to the next
generation. But Togo did not have a history of conflict like Uganda has had.
Museveni may therefore try to survive but he may not succeed,†says Dr Oloka.
Bidandi too
is pessimistic about Museveni’s patrimony: “It’s a nasty practice and I
pity his lineage on the basis of what history can give as lessons in different
countries.â€Â    Â
So while it
is certain that Museveni is patrimony will collapse tomorrow or the other day,
the extent of its collapse is perhaps best illustrated by Onyango-Obbo. “The
disadvantage of this creation of and reliance on a family akazu [rule] is that you do not
create a buffer between your family and your enemies, because there aren’t
enough non-relatives in the inner eating circle. Thus a Museveni
regime’s collapse will affect more members of his family more quickly and
directly than it did Obote’s or Amin’s. Also, because you have no buffer,
very few of them will help your relatives escape in the event of a coup, for
example, because you have not cultivated a large enough constituency of
‘subjective loyalty’ for people to take high risks to aid your flight.â€
Interestingly
of all Ugandan presidents, none of them has been as obsessed about legacy as
Museveni. And he will rule longer than any other president probably ever will
again. Yet, ironically, because of his irrational dependence on family, his
legacy will disappear faster than those of presidents who ruled for fewer
years.
Again, if his
family-rule structure has the risk of decimating more of his family in the
event of his coming to an abrupt end, it means there shall not be too many
people out there to keep his story alive, to cling on to his good works, and to
insist on an accurate recording of the history of his rule. For that, one needs
to have inner, outer, far outer, and farther out layers of people who feel they
are included in the intimate workings of your government, to carry on your
memory. If these people are not there, you will be forgotten more quickly. Thus
the irony is that Milton Obote – and people like DP’s Ben Kiwanuka – will
live longer in history as positive mentions, than Museveni.
- See more at:
http://www.independent.co.ug/cover-story/cover-story/690-family-rule-in-uganda-?showall=1#sthash.SIsG71Ss.dpuf
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