Uganda in a crisis with itself

Hi good people

As i have been suspecting for a long time about how Uganda land issues are normally resolved,a mainstream daily have hust confirmed my fears.Mark you this is a govt newspaper in Uganda.Please copy this URL to your browser’s address bar and read more for yourself.Uganda has a land crisis with itself and that crisis is spilling over to almost all its neighbors not just Kenyaand somehow,we cannot let fires inside a neighbor’s house burn us too.Something has to be done

Here is the URL.http://newvision.co.ug/D/8/12/679164

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Date: Sun, 26 Apr 2009 18:29:31 +0300 [10:29:31 AM CDT]
From: Dere South
Subject: Uganda in a crisis with itself

3 thoughts on “Uganda in a crisis with itself

  1. John O Nyamayi

    The row over Migingo is not simple
    UGANDAN politicians are wrong: the row over Migingo Island is not a
    small matter. It is the tip the iceberg waiting to wreck the East African federation vessel.

    I find it unbelievable that our politicians still do not get it. They are saying the Migingo Island is a
    small matter between us and “our brothers”. It is not that simple.

    What is the relevance of this “brotherhood” if Aggrey Awori
    needs an entry permit to visit Moody Awori in Kenya? And what
    kind of “brothers” yank out a major artery — the railway line to Mombasa — that is critical to our economic competitiveness as a land-locked nation?

    Now, more than ever before, I am
    convinced that the matter of our
    having “brothers” in Kenya or elsewhere, is of little consequence
    to regional integration. That enterprise must be driven by the
    concept of “good neighbourliness”
    as the boss of Rift Valley Railways — the operators of our major artery to the sea — correctly
    argued recently.

    Look at how good neighbourliness
    in Europe, North America and South-East Asia, is contributing to wonderful things: booming trade, conflict management, prosperity for large middle-classes, educational progress, better health and long life.

    Those people are reducing or eliminating whatever differences
    exist between them as individual
    nations; They are building supranational institutions that ease
    movement of people, ideas, technology, goods and services across increasingly superficial borders.

    It is in the interest of America for Mexico to be prosperous to limit the number of poor amigos running up north. No wonder, President Barack Obama visited Mexico instead of rushing to see his poor Kenyan brothers and sisters.

    It is economic cooperation, not political federation, that should anchor our quest for regional integration. And a pan-african economic community makes a whole lot more sense that this “small is beautiful” East African federation our politicians want.

    Even if they force us into that small tent, we will continue bickering and throwing poisoned darts at each other as Ugandans, Kenyans and whatever.

    The Migingo row should warn us to change tact and direction if we ever want to escape from poverty and misery.

  2. nyoremo

    Uganda s Museveni want to be felt by all neighbour Kenya should not accept Luo youth be prepared to defend ur land. Kibaki assindwe

  3. J

    Tajudeen A. Raheem

    If you read the Kenyan and Ugandan papers or monitor other regional media , it would be understandable if you conclude that both countries are about to go to war over a disputed island that is about the size of half of a standard football field, with no much room for supporters to watch if there was a ‘5-a-side’ football match.

    Why would two countries with very warm relations in recent years , both committed to further regional integration through an expanded East Africa Community, both members of several regional multilateral organisations, go to war or escalate border dispute to this level?

    I think the ease with which an African State is more prone to violent dialogue as opposed to peaceful settlement of disputes has to do with the nature of these states artificially built to satisfy other people’s interests and largely unchanged in its anti- people character, decades after independence.

    Otherwise we have to ask ourselves why States that cannot defend their own people from hunger and disease, are ready and able to go to war whatever the cost in human and material terms. Unfortunately the citizens for whom the State could not provide basic services are mobilised and driven into frenetic nationalism.

    There are differences between the reaction of Uganda’s and Kenya’s political leadership. Kenya has held out the position that this conflict should be resolved diplomatically and politically. Uganda says the same but typical of the way and manner in which President Museveni and the NRA/M came to power: prepare for war while talking peace.

    But the reaction of the media in both countries’ contrasts the political responses. In Uganda the media is not that gung ho whereas the Kenya media is spoiling for war and quite critical of what they see as a weak response from President Kibaki’s administration. Indeed Uganda has virtually been at war with all its neighbours at one point or the other with the exception of Kenya and Burundi (though many in Bujumbura may dispute this!).

    But Kenya is not known for interstate militarism even though its internal politics has been very violent with ethnic clashes, high profile assassinations culminating in the violent post election disputes of 2007/8. So Kenya’s political elite could be violent towards each other in their battles for supremacy but they seem to have kept it within their borders whereas Uganda’s political violence is historically externalised. So why is the Kenya media so militant? Partly because they are already frustrated with the coalition government for its non delivery but in particular, President Kibaki’s ‘hands off’ approach to many controversies.

    The President is infamous for remaining quiet in the face of burning issues that sometimes there is an impression that the country is on auto piloting. Migingo merely provides yet another opportunity for the media and the wider public to vent their spleen, this time using the threat of aggression by their gun-totting neighbours to whip up patriotism.

    It is really sad that our patriotism and nationalism are brought out mostly in the negative. Where is the patriotism of the media in the face of corruption that is destroying the country; compromising the delivery of services, maintenance of roads and killing people in badly maintained hospitals?

    Where is the media’s patriotism in an aspiring middle income country that has 10 million of its citizens facing mass hunger and starvation when there is plenty of food, why are they not waging war against corruption and hunger? Hunger in Kenya is not because there is no food but because the poor do not have the resources to buy food.

    The middle class professionals and the indolent political elite, who do not produce anything but milked the country dry, have money to buy any food they want whereas the poor and powerless cannot farm due to drought and cannot eat due to lack of economic means occasioning famine. Where is the patriotism about this?

    If militarism really works, President Museveni should have annihilated Joseph Kony and the LRA. Unfortunately, as they say a leopard cannot change its spots. However, this conflict needs to be resolved through legal, diplomatic and political means.

    President Kibaki has been pressured into ‘vowing’ to defend Migingo but ‘defence’ does not and should not mean going to war. It is not a sign of weakness to give politics and diplomacy a chance.

    All conflicts on this continent eventually are resolved by negotiations even if one side ‘won’ militarily. It is a setback for the fast tracking of East Africa integration of which President Museveni is a key champion.

    Dr Tajudeen Abdul-Raheem writes this syndicated column in his capacity as a concerned Pan Africanist

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