Museveni at 25: Still fit?
“Look at him!” the
emcee at celebrations to mark 25 years in power for Ugandan President
Yoweri Museveni shouts into a mic. “Look at him! He is very fit!” The
former rebel decked out in his usual – and fairly unique – floppy hat
and suit combo ambles down a grass slope and waves cheerily to his
supporters.
“Look!” she shouts
again. “You can even see from the way he is walking!” Moments later, a
pick-up truck draws alongside the 66-year-old and he slowly clambers up
onto the back to continue saluting the crowds.
“Oh…” she pauses for a moment before quickly gathering herself.
“He is in a car
now!” she booms. “That is the modern way! He needs that vantage point
to see you. He is a kind-hearted man who wants to see you!” A nice bit
of quick-thinking there from one of the party faithful all too aware
the Ugandan opposition wants to portray the famously shrewd operator as
past it.
That shrewd
operating was plain to see, as “Sevo” was careful not to make the bash
about himself – rather it was about Uganda and its progress.
Reading out a list
of 551 war heroes and parroting statistics about growth and exports
didn’t exactly make for a great party but it got the message across: I
care about the people. I rely on heroic Ugandans. I have made things
better.
Few Ugandans would
deny that. The country Museveni took hold of in 1986 decked out in his
fatigues had become something of a sorry husk after years of civil war.
He quickly made it stable, got it growing convincingly and became an
example for other African leaders – the oft mentioned 90s “new breed”.
But, for many in the country and outside, something’s gone wrong.
And it hinges on one of his most famous quotes.
“The problem of
Africa in general and Uganda in particular is not the people but
leaders who want to overstay in power,” he said when he took the helm A
quarter of a century later, he’s still there.
As he spoke about a new road at his celebration, a Ugandan leaned to me:
“120kms of road is what he’s boasting about after 25 years! Big deal,” he said.
That opinion was
reflected to some extent on radio phone-in shows and on social
networking site, Twitter, as the country tried to make sense of his
tenure.
A man identifying
himself as Jeff called into a radio show and said: “The liberators have
grown fat. And the people they liberated have grown skinny.” That
perception, right or wrong, that Museveni and the ruling National
Resistance Movement have been feeding at the trough, is particularly
damaging and anger is growing, an anger that was reflected on the
radio, on the TV and in Kampala’s bars.
On Twitter some
were equally scathing, especially after I tweeted from the party that
Museveni had said, “We have recovered. We are now going to take off.”
“Huh!” journalist Evelyn Lirri replied. “It’s taken 25 years to
recover. We might need another 20 to take off.” Alan Kasujja, a radio
host, tweeted that there was good and bad to the legacy.
There were others,
though, who had nothing but praise for Museveni and were unconvinced
that any of the opposition leaders could do better – an opinion
seemingly shared by the U.S. as revealed in a cable obtained by
WikiLeaks.
The opposition is
“fractured and politically immature,” the dispatch said. “It is by no
means clear (they) would improve governance in Uganda in any way.” For
some, despite the marathon stint in power, Museveni is still the
country’s best bet.
So what do you think? Is he still fit for power? Or is it time he took a rest?
REUTERS
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