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Home The Last Word The Last Word Who will defend our freedoms?

Who will defend our freedoms?

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The government of Uganda has written a Media Law Amendment Bill which, even a committee composed of Joseph Stalin, Adolf Hitler, Idi Amin, Benito Mussolini and Pol Pot would find rather stringent. Yet it is not the law that I find the problem but rather the response of the stakeholders within Uganda society – media owners, journalists, civil society and the wider public. Except for a workshop or two by the indefatigable Peter Mwesige, we have all largely been silent.

I admit entirely that I am a part of the problem. I am both a journalist and a media owner. Except for “exposing” the Bill and its dangers in The Independent and calling a few media owners to ask them to build a united front against it, I have done little else to fight it. How can such a blatant attempt to kill us as professionals and our businesses not produce a collective organisation in defence of our rights especially given Uganda’s well known traditions of freewheeling debate?

It is in this context that Ibrahim Semujju, one of the best investigative reporters our nation had produced came to my office for a comment. A tenacious fighter for press freedom, Semujju was visibly angry at the Bill. What do you have to say about it, he asked me? As I have grown old and possibly stupid, I am less inclined to give obvious answers to such questions. I could rant about how anti-democratic President Yoweri Museveni has become. But that does not answer the challenge we are facing in the media.

Museveni’s political credibility has been declining. Although he has presided over a growing economy, blatant corruption, electoral theft, institutionalised incompetence and obvious nepotism have diminished his political appeal. He must therefore be feeling considerable political vulnerability even when the opposition is weak, disorganised and incoherent to master a serious challenge to his power.

From a purely rational perspective, it is necessary for the government to clampdown on independent media ahead of next year’s presidential elections. This is necessary to insulate the President and his cronies from public scrutiny. In short, he is doing what any rational politician would do in his circumstances. The challenge then is how can we stop him? Why do we talk, quarrel and shout but never do the most necessary thing: organise in collective defence of our liberties?

Across time and space, the development of democracy has been occasioned by the growth of civic associations and social movements to represent specific constituencies within a polity – drivers, farmers, students, professionals (teachers, medical and industrial workers), vendors, hawkers and associations for small, medium and big businesses.

There are signs of the growth of these associations but they are still young and weak. Indeed, immediately before independence, Africa was teaming with social movements and pressure groups demanding political participation. After independence, most of these groups were either swallowed by the state or demobilised. Reconstructing them has been difficult. That is why associations representing journalists and media owners have been absent in the debate to reopen CBS.

In the place of a civil society born of the hard realities of our politics and social-economic life, our associational life has been taken over by NGOs. Yet the primary constituency of NGOs is not the intended beneficiaries of their activism but rather those who fund their work. NGOs are burdened with the responsibility of financial accountability to their donors instead of accounting to those they intend to serve. This has disarticulated activists from their constituencies.

 The penetration of foreign aid – as money, as activism, as peace keepers, as technical assistance etc – has demobilised local initiative and in many ways undermined the evolution of democratic participation. For example, it seems to me Ugandan journalists and media owners are waiting for Human Rights Watch, Amnesty International and Reporters Without Borders to defend our right to free expression.

The result of such expectations is that we have sat on our hands waiting for the next indicting report of Uganda from these groups or for Hillary Clinton, Barack Obama and David Cameron to issue a statement condemning the Bill. And then what these people say will be front page news. Yet until the front page news is a mass demonstration by the concerned in defence of our rights, or a meeting of government and journalists, our freedoms will remain compromised by our inaction.

Although international moral solidarity is important, we should not be blind to its unintended consequences on how we organise our polities. The last time we sought to form a journalist association, Friedrich Ebert Foundation offered to fund it. I strongly objected to this because Ugandan journalists should be willing to “invest” i.e. sacrifice their personal income for the pursuit of our collective interest. If we are not willing to sacrifice for our future, we do not deserve foreign help.

And it is not just the weakness of journalist associations. Across Uganda, the public healthcare, education and road system has literally fallen apart. Every morning I drive amidst thousands of cars whose occupants have to endure potholes, floods and traffic congestion. Behind these wheels are our nation’s middle and upper classes. Why does such inconvenience not produce collective organisations to correct the dysfunction?

More than the authoritarian trappings of the state in Uganda, I think it is the democratic content of our government that explains our institutional failures. For example, there is a bargain between the elite class here and the state; instead of public money serving the public good (like building good schools, roads and hospitals) it is used to buy private goods (individual mansions, luxury cars, expensive holidays, medical evacuation and private education for our children abroad).

The collusion of those in the state with those in the private sector to steal public funds has allowed the elite in Uganda to remain comfortable with the infrastructural crisis we are facing. To alter this bargain may involve a level of harshness that a democratic process cannot sustain. How many Ugandans are willing to risk their liberties (to break the law, build in wetlands, evade taxes, drive recklessly, steal public funds, etc) in the name of an uncertain but better future?

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Comments (13)Add Comment
NO INDEPENDENCE IN UGANDA YET!
written by OJA, June 10, 2010
We never fought our political Independence. Hence we don't know the sacrifice, cost and effect of fighting for our rights, freedom or independence. Had we done it like our comrades in South Africa, nobody would be fooling and raping us. It explains why Ugandans always await a divine intervention (which doesn't really matter) in many cases where they needed to rise up and say NO. WE DON'T WANT! So Andrew Mwenda and the co., do we await the divine intervention or we fight for our rights, freedom and intervention?
Pure rational? Think again.
written by kato, June 10, 2010
There is nothing rational about M7 clamping down on the media on the basis of his political troubles. If M7 was rational he would know that the path he is on is for losers and not just losers but really bad ones.
The lack of industry support for CBS is that its competitors saw an opportunity to improve their ratings and revenue(which is sad), plus M7 is good at playing them against each other. As for why a media owner like Mwenda has not done enough to oppose the proposed law? Simple, his major concern is if his business can keep running even if media freedom is in trouble--again, very sad. And no one drives through 1000's of cars in kla, it is just that the 100's there are just stationery hours on end.
Gullible Parochialists Always Play into Hands of Dictators
written by Ocheto, June 10, 2010
The elite in Germany bought into Hitler’s rhetoric; Italians fell for Mussolini lies; and Ugandans celebrated as Idi Amin ascended to power and the elites lined up to work under him. The omenous signs were ignored. As long the capable work in their little corners, Mu7 will continue to laugh all the way to the bank while Uganda is doomed. The rampant parochialism evident in your writing and in the political organizations plays right into the hands of Mu7’s machinations. Until Ugandans start to act in unison, the morass will envelope all facets. Uganda's problems are due to a corrupt, dictatorial political dispensation. The pressure groups are inadequate to alter this reality because they work at the edges (of the problem). So, organize politically if you want the right change.
A country without patriots
written by Osiris, June 10, 2010
It's up to the to the citizens of a given country to transform their country to make it a better and fairer society. After all that is where you live, work and play! It's interesting to note that many Ugandan elites have decided to "sell their souls to the devil" in exchange for short term rewards. What kind of country do they want to leave for the next generation ? Ugandans population continues to grow and without proper investments in infrastructure to meet current and future demands millions more will be abandoned to poverty and hopelessness. This article is a challenge to the greedy elite to put the needs of the country above selfish personal interest.
No one is safe under a dictatorship....
written by Lord Anubis, June 11, 2010
An important lesson for Ugandans is that, you need to support each other if you are to ever take back your country from the grip of a very cunning and ruthless dictatorship. I wish to remind readers of Pastor Martin Niemöller (1892–1984) who came up with the "First they came ..." poem about the inactivity of German intellectuals following the Nazi rise to power and the purging of their chosen targets, group after group. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/First_they_came... We have seen a similar scenario in Uganda under National Resistance Movement (NRM). In the case of Uganda they started off with the Acholi's, then Langi's, then Itesots, then journalist, then judges, now Baganda etc etc etc... no one is safe
No one is safe under a dictatorship....2
written by Lord Anubis, June 11, 2010
As the dictatorship went about implementing its slow genocidal policies against the Acholi, in which an estimated one million people have perished, most Ugandans simply turned a blind eye because they are not Acholi, not realising that sooner or later it would be their turn to face the wrath of the dictatorship. http://www.friendsforpeaceinaf...tionq.html Perhaps if they had adopted a different attitude early enough we would not have seen the September 2009 riots in Kampala in which an estimated 42 people were massacred. The moral of the story is: “united we stand, divided we all fall”
...
written by Mafta Mingi, June 12, 2010
Ugandans are ready to fight the useless and hopeless dictator , who has ruled Uganda with greed and grudge , we will crash the dictator's bones to power and his flesh burned to ashes , Ugandans are now awake , waiting for the thief to attempt his last act of robbery , him and his relatives will be burnt like pests and vamines ,
...
written by mukiibi, June 12, 2010
Hahahahahaha. Who's hopeless - M7 or Mafta Mingi?
breaking an egg to make a cake
written by Lwegaba Steven, June 13, 2010
Andrew, I believe your old age is wisdom not stupidity and behold, we have to make a sacrife to have a better Uganda.after all if you want to make a cake then you are going to break a few eggs. Nothing will be achieved of substance without wanting 2 take a risk.
Professional deficit
written by Denis Musinguzi, June 14, 2010
One thing that Mwenda and all the commentators have ignored is the lethargy of professional deficit that Uganda's elite and professional outfits have comfortably fallen prey to. Uganda's media has been hijacked by comedians; and media houses, in search of economic gains, have absconded from their self-regulation duty. Consequently, what we see in Uganda is not lack of freedom but too much of it that we eventually fail to manage it. We all must know that freedom in itself is not a virtue, but how well we use it. We more often talk about freedom without addressing responsibility that freedom demands. If media houses and owners cannot use freedom responsibly, the government has to help out in the way it does best-constraining legislation.
WHO WILL BELL THE CAT?
written by Jeff Wadulo, June 14, 2010
It is not surprising how dictatorships, especially communist ones stay long in power and continue to oppress the masses (Cuba, Uganda, Libya?, Rwanda, etc). Such dictatorships need the help of a superior international force to engineer regime change. How else would Sadam Hussein, Hitler, Mobutu, Idi Amin and others been ousted? Perhaps the US needs to come to our rescue and shoot Museveni and his cronies out of power like they did with Sadam Hussein. Or else, shut up people and fight for your own rights. Museveni did that in 1981. He did not cry about it. He did something about his discontent. What are the rest of you guys then waiting for?

Crocodile tears
written by Akello, June 15, 2010
Mwenda you are shouting now when you are being touched. You deliberately help this rigime in its evil endeavours, in the guise of independent analysis in order to appeal to the elites. So please spare us the crocodile tears. Am dissappointed that Semujju sought consel from Mwenda who daily plans for his down fall.
...
written by Mafta Mingi, June 15, 2010
Ugandans must come to their aid and destroy the dictatorship , we can fight and defeat this useless failed regime , they have done nothing and now blame Buganda for their stupity

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