Domain Registration

Uganda: Political fever spikes as election nears

  • August 14, 2020

The political fever in Uganda is rising: The East African country is gearing up for a contentious general election between January 10 and February 8. 

While nominations are due to start in September, according to the electoral roadmap, politicians have been shifting their allegiances. Various Members of Parliament from the ruling National Resistance Movement (NRM) and other opposition parties have switched to Bobi Wine’s People Power Movement (PPM).

NRM MPs Patrick Nsamba Osabe of the Kassanda North district and John Baptist Nambeshe of Manjiya County are among them.

A new National Unity Platform 

Bobi Wine — a 38-year-old singer-turned-politician whose real name is Robert Kyagulanyi — is an opposition sensation. In July last year, he proclaimed that he “will challenge President Museveni on behalf of the people.”

In July, Wine officially launched a political party called National Unity Platform (NUP) to enable the PPM to contest the 2021 election.

“We did this because we knew we had to answer the cries of the people to unite. We established the National Unity Platform to unite all forces of change,” Wine told DW in an exclusive interview.

Wine recently hosted a delegation of European Union ambassadors at his office amid reports that his political activities are funded by foreign governments.

Bobi Wine

Bobi Wine launched his political party National Unity Platform in July

His spokesman Joel Senyonyi said discussions in the closed meeting included the issue of the space available in Uganda for the opposition to carry out its activities.

“Our interaction with them was on many fronts, the going-on here in our country, our political party, the plans we have going forward and the election,” Senyonyi told DW.

“But it was a fruitful meeting. They shared their thoughts, and we shared ours about anything that is ongoing.”

Amidst the coronavirus pandemic, the Electoral Commission had banned mass gatherings and directed candidates to use media platforms to reach out to their voters.

Museveni is popular in polls

Pre-election opinion polls place President Museveni first with 47% and Kyagulanyi second with 21%.

A presidential candidate in Uganda must receive 50% plus one vote in the election to avoid a run-off vote.

  • Malema addressing a crowd of supporters wearing red clothing (picture-alliance/dpa/C. Tukiri)

    Red is the color of opposition in Africa

    Leader in red

    Julius Malema and his allies founded South Africa’s far-left Economic Freedom Fighters (EFF) party after being expelled by the youth league of the ruling African National Congress in 2013. Malema and his party have since gained wide pan-African appeal.

  • Women supporters of the MDC beating pots and pans

    Red is the color of opposition in Africa

    Color for change

    Zimbabwe’s main opposition Movement for Democratic Change (MDC-T) came to prominence at the height of the country’s spiral into an economic downturn from which it is yet to recover. The T in its name is a reference to the party’s late founding leader Morgan Tsvangirai who was detained and tortured by the previous government of Robert Mugabe. MDC gatherings were banned recently.

  • Bobi Wine in a red beret with the logo of his movement

    Red is the color of opposition in Africa

    Ghetto president

    Bobi Wine is the stage name of the leader of Uganda’s People Power Movement, Kyagulanyi Ssetamu Robert. He is a popular musician. Uganda’s long-time President Yoweri Museveni has banned the red beret favored by Wine and his supporters, saying it should be reserved for the military.

  • Nigerian woman Aisha Yusuf taking on Boko Haram

    Red is the color of opposition in Africa

    #BringBackOurGirls

    In April 2014, 276 school girls were kidnapped by Boko Haram in Chibok in Nigeria’s Borno state. Dozens of girls were later freed or escaped but most are still being held captive by the extremist group. Aisha Yusuf has been one of the most vocal advocates for their release. An international campaign for their release uses hashtags that include #BringBackOurGirls and #ChibokGirls

  • MCP leader Lazarus Chakwera surrounded by supporters at a protest against Jane Ansah

    Red is the color of opposition in Africa

    No to a white-out vote

    The alleged use of correction fluid on marked ballots in Malawi’s May 2019 presidential election has caused widespread outrage. The opposition Malawi Congress Party (MCP) and its supporters have been calling for the resignation of the chair of the country’s electoral commission, Jane Ansah, ever since.

  • Student protesters in South Africa (Reuters/S. Sibeko)

    Red is the color of opposition in Africa

    #MustFall movements

    In recent years, various movements have sprung up, many of them led by students protesting on the streets and on the internet under hashtags such as #FeesMustFall or #RhodesMustFall and #GhandiMustFall, over colonial-era public statues and ideas.

  • A large protest march with participants wearing red (AFP/C. Binani)

    Red is the color of opposition in Africa

    Seeing red

    Guinea has seen regular anti-government protests since October 2019, with participants wearing the color of the opposition coalition. Many Guineans are angry over the West African country’s octogenarian leader Alpha Conde’s plans to revise the constitution and make a third presidential term possible.

  • A poster showing Russian revolutionary Vladimir Lenin (picture alliance/CPA Media Co. Ltd)

    Red is the color of opposition in Africa

    Red for revolution

    Red has always been the color of the revolution since at least 1848. Roman generals had their bodies colored red to celebrate victories whilst the Ancient Egyptians and Mayans colored their faces red in ceremonies. Soviet Russia adopted a red flag following the Bolshevik Revolution in 1917, later followed by China, Vietnam, and other communist countries.

    Author: Josephine Mahachi


Although the Museveni camp says the veteran leader is a strong enough contender to win the vote outright, Patrick Wakida of Kampala-based Research World International warns that opinion polls are not a final indicator of the election outcome.

“Opinions change,” Wakida told DW. “I have seen a lot of panic especially from a lot of political players but I can only just console them that opinions change. Maybe they have changed in their favor, maybe they have not changed in their favor. The political elites in this country need to understand what sampling is, opinion polls are never a census.”

Wine is ‘presidential material’

However, Wine remains optimistic about his chances.

“I am not here because I am presidential material”, he told DW. “I come here as a glue to put together all these resources. What we need right now is a leadership that will lead us through this dictatorship.” 

Wine believes it takes more than a leader’s qualities to lead a country. “I know that I am fully qualified to lead Uganda but I know it is not my qualifications alone. It’s the qualification of all the Ugandans who want change.”

“I must say I am presidential material. I am well-educated, I am well-researched and well-traveled.” 

Uganda Präsident Yoweri Museveni (Reuters/J. Akena)

Museveni came to power in Uganda in 1986, around four years after Bobi Wine was born

Old and new faces  

Wine is not the only one preparing to take on the long-serving president. Others include Henry Tumukunde, a Museveni ally who previously served as national security minister.

The 61-year-old has launched his own platform. “I would like to formally announce to all Ugandans that I will be contesting for the presidency in the forthcoming general election as an independent candidate under the platform called Renewed Uganda,” Tumukunde said.

A few old hands at running for office are not taking part in the 2021 election. Kizza Besigye who has challenged Museveni four times since 2001 says he will not contest any election organized under the ruling NRM.

The former Forum for Democratic Change (FDC) president and Wine have joined forces in a new alliance called the United Forces of Change.

According to Besigye, there are alternatives to focusing on the election — which he called “a fake process”. “Our focus should not be manipulated into a political process that does not answer our needs, what they call a roadmap is a roadmap to the gallows, it’s not a roadmap to freedom. The challenge of this country is not leadership, it is freedom.”

Two youths (Reuters/)

Africans under the age of 35 make up the majority on the continent

Youth making the change

It will be women and youth who will participate and influence the outcome of the upcoming election, Perry Aritua of the Women’s Democracy Network told DW.

“A number of them are not affiliated to any political party and there are also young candidates in the election, particularly candidate Robert Kyagulanyi, who has a number of young followers,” Aritua explained.

“If these young people are registered and if they participate, then they will have an influence in the next election.”

Bobi Wine joined politics in 2017 after winning a parliamentary by-election. His presidential bid has stirred significant support especially among the country’s youth drawn by his use of music to spotlight rampant rights abuses, corruption and Museveni’s long rule.

Article source: https://www.dw.com/en/uganda-political-fever-spikes-as-election-nears/a-54570643?maca=en-rss-en-all-1573-rdf

Related News

Search

Get best offer

Booking.com
%d bloggers like this: