Friends of Pambazuka

Finance and Operations Director - Fahamu

Fahamu is seeking an experienced Finance and Operations Director to manage the organisation's finance and operations team.
This role will be based in Nairobi, Kenya but will have a remit covering the whole of Fahamu's pan-African programmes with offices in Kenya, Senegal, South Africa and UK.
The deadline for applications is February 10, 2012.

Download job description (Word)
Download application form (Word)

Dust From Our Eyes cover Dust From Our Eyes
An Unblinkered Look at Africa
Joan Baxter

Joan Baxter eloquently exposes the diversity of Africa, the injustices Africans have faced and the strengths that have helped them weather adversity. She erodes the tired stereotypes of the western media and provides compelling evidence of the need for westerners to scrutinise their own countries' policies at home and abroad.

Buy now from Pambazuka Press

Latest titles from Pambazuka Press

From Citizen to Refugee

From Citizen to Refugee Uganda Asians come to Britain
Mahmood Mamdani
'On the face of it, life in the camp presented a sharp and favourable contrast to the open terror of living in Uganda. But it was the Kensington camp, and not Amin's Uganda, which was my first experience of what it would be like to live in a totalitarian society.' Mahmood Mamdani
Buy now

African Awakening

African Awakening The Emerging Revolutions
The tumultuous uprisings in Tunisia, Egypt and Libya have seized the attention of media but what about the rest of Africa? With incisive contributions from across the continent, "African Awakening" presents the 2011 uprisings in their African context.
Buy now

Demystifying Aid

Yash Tandon

Demystifying Aid This pamphlet from Pambazuka Press shows that 'development aid' is not what it purports to be - the effects of actions of well-meaning allies in the North who support aid to Africa for reasons of ethics or solidarity are, unfortunately, the opposite of their good intentions.
Buy now

To Cook a Continent

To Cook a Continent Destructive Extraction and the Climate Crisis in Africa
Nnimmo Bassey
Exploiting Africa's resources has delivered huge profits to the North and huge damage to Africa's environment and economies. Overcoming the crises of environment and climate change means also addressing corporate profiteering and resource extraction.
Buy now

Earth Grab

Earth Grab Geopiracy, the New Biomassters and Capturing Climate Genes
Diana Bronson, Hope Shand, Jim Thomas, Kathy Jo Wetter
As greedy eyes focus on the global South's resources this book 'pulls back the curtain on disturbing technological and corporate trends that are already reshaping our world and that will become crucial battlegrounds for civil society in the years ahead.
Buy now

Pambazuka News Broadcasts

Pambazuka broadcasts feature audio and video content with cutting edge commentary and debate from social justice movements across the continent.

See the list of episodes.

AU MONITOR

This site has been established by Fahamu to provide regular feedback to African civil society organisations on what is happening with the African Union.

Perspectives on Emerging Powers in Africa: December 2011 newsletter

Deborah Brautigam provides an overview and description of China's development finance to Africa. "Looking at the nature of Chinese development aid - and non-aid - to Africa provides insights into China's strategic approach to outward investment and economic diplomacy, even if exact figures and strategies are not easily ascertained", she states as she describes China's provision of grants, zero-interest loans and concessional loans. Pambazuka Press recently released a publication titled India in Africa: Changing Geographies of Power, and Oliver Stuenkel provides his review of the book.
The December edition available here.

The 2010 issues: September, October, November, December, and the 2011 issues: January, February, March , April, May , June , July , August , September, October and November issues are all available for download.

Creative Commons License
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-No Derivative Works 3.0 Unported License.

Pan-African Postcard

Liberation from ‘liberators’?: Uganda and the NRM

Tajudeen Abdul-Raheem

2008-12-03, Issue 410

http://pambazuka.org/en/category/panafrican/52405

Bookmark and Share

Printer friendly version

There is 1 comment on this article.

Though applauding the success of this year’s record-breaking Stand Up action on global poverty, Tajudeen Abdul-Raheem wonders whether revitalising the UN’s Millennium Development Goals (MDGs) will simply amount to lining the pockets of a few individual African recipients in positions of power. Taking up the example of the National Resistance Movement (NRM) in Uganda, the author situates such latent misappropriation of resources within a broader problem of one-time liberation leaders lingering in power. Once a genuine force for changing the system, Yoweri Museveni’s NRM, Abdul-Raheem argues, have now become the system.

What happens to revolutionaries when they get into power? This familiar question was haunting me all of last week when I was back ‘home’ (I lived in Uganda from 1992–2005 and still hold a Ugandan government diplomatic passport). We were having the Africa retreat of the UN Millennium Campaign at the Imperial Botanical Beach Hotel (better known as the Clinton Hotel, with a Clinton suite and a Clinton Pavilion to show for it, because that was where President Clinton stayed during his 1998 Monica-de-stressing visit to Africa). We were in Entebbe in October with Millennium Development Goals (MDG) campaigners from 16 countries across Africa to celebrate this year’s Guinness world record-breaking ‘Stand Up’ action in support of the MDGs campaigning globally and especially around Africa. More than 50 million Africans in 40 countries participated in Stand Up this year as part of the 117 million participants in more than 130 countries across the world.

For an event that began with 14 million in 2006 to have grown by almost eight times in only two years with a more diverse group of people participating in it is proof, if indeed any is still needed, that the peoples of the world are outraged at the level of grinding poverty experienced by billions in a world where ‘there is enough to satisfy our needs but not enough to satisfy our greed’!

The guest of honour was a long-term comrade, a ‘historical’ member of the Ugandan National Resistance Army/Movement, a senior member of the government since 1986, a pan-Africanist and controversial public figure, and a man to whom I owe my life, who has fished me out of life-threatening situations twice. He was not disappointing in raising a lot of controversies about MDGs and how they can be achieved in Africa but some of his conclusions were most disappointing. As an ideologue of the NRM, he has displayed the kind of gross insensitivity to the ordinary citizen and ideological retreat that has characterised President Museveni’s long-term hegemony over the Ugandan state and society. They have stayed in power so long that they have all but forgotten their previous jobs, values, and visions. From heralding ‘fundamental change’ they have become apostles of ‘no change’. They have become reactionaries, tired revolutionaries exhausting the country they claim to have liberated. The challenge now facing Ugandans is similar to what is facing Zimbabweans, Ethiopians, Eritreans, and other post-liberation societies: how to liberate themselves from their liberators.

These liberators have now become establishment reactionaries blocking future changes. My good comrade reduced the attainment of the MDGs to ‘putting money in the pockets of individual Africans’. I have no problem with Africans becoming richer and having more money to in their pockets. But can we all make money like ministers? He went on further to state without any coyness or sense of decorum that ‘my children do not go to UPE [Universal Primary Education] schools’, adding that if he was sick he would not go to Mulago, the national hospital. If ministers do not use the services provided by the government of which they are members why should the public trust those departments? My comrade the minister was being honest, but that honesty also reveals how far the NRM oligarchy has travelled in the opposite direction of the fundamental change they promised. They are no longer changing the system because they are the system. The burden of change is now squarely on the shoulders of another generation. They are no longer part of the solution but very central to the problem.

The following day we had a public forum at the Grand Imperial on how Africa can achieve the MDGs in 2015. The speakers included Professor Augustus from Makerere University, Dr Tola from the Make Our Money Work For Us MDG/GCAP coalition in Nigeria, a young Ugandan woman/youth activist, our Global Director Salil Shetty, and me as the wrap up speaker. It was a well attended meeting, very passionate and most engaging with participants from a broad section of the Ugandan society and pan-Africanist constituencies. The consensus was that the MDGs may not be achieved, not because there are no resources but for lack of political will by African leaders for goals No1 to No 7 and the political leaders of the enriched countries who are not delivering on the eight goals.

The discussion was even more passionate. A participant who is a senior bureaucrat from the Ministry of Health of Uganda earned well-warranted opprobrium from the audience when he suggested that the meeting was just about noisemakers shouting the usual taunts about governance, accountability, corruption, and saying less about ‘the how question’. For a senior bureaucrat supposedly appointed as a qualified technocrat to go to a public meeting for ‘the how question’ raises questions about his qualifications. But his dismissal of the governance issues raise even more questions in the context of Uganda. A senior official from a ministry that is overwhelmed with corruption charges that led to the censure and sacking of ministers and exposure of grand corruption involving all kinds of well-connected people and their fake NGOs is the last person to be so pompous as to dismiss public outcry. But his attitude represents what is wrong with the NRM regime: their contempt for the ordinary citizen. They have stayed so long in power that they behave as though they are monarchs. Many of them hope to remain in power for as long as President Museveni is there. This is why Museveni and the NRM have no form of exit strategy. They cannot remember not being in power and cannot contemplate not being in power, whatever their citizens may think.

* Tajudeen Abdul-Raheem is general secretary of the Global Pan-African Movement, based in Kampala, Uganda, and is also director of Justice Africa, based in London, UK.
* Please send comments to editor@pambazuka.org or comment online at http://www.pambazuka.org/


Readers' Comments

Let your voice be heard. Comment on this article.

I am suprised that no one had commented on this issue ever since Dr. raised it. May his soul rest in peace.
The fundamental question that we have to answer is what went wrong with our Liberators? Is it a phenomena that we should expect with another generation of Liberators? Was the NRM episode in the bush war really liberation?????

Ofuq Be'ngwecho. Osukuru Rubongi Land Development Advocacy Organisation




↑ back to top

ISSN 1753-6839 Pambazuka News English Edition http://www.pambazuka.org/en/

ISSN 1753-6847 Pambazuka News en Français http://www.pambazuka.org/fr/

ISSN 1757-6504 Pambazuka News em Português http://www.pambazuka.org/pt/

© 2009 Fahamu - http://www.fahamu.org/