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About the President |
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Yoweri
Kaguta Museveni became President of the Republic
of Uganda on January 29, 1986 after leading a
successful five-year liberation struggle. He went to
the bush with 26 other young men and organized the
National Resistance Movement and National Resistance
Army (NRM/NRA) to oppose the tyranny that previous
regimes had unleashed upon the population.
After victory, he formed a broad-based government
that helped to unite the country’s political
groups.
Previous to the struggle
of 1981-1986, Museveni had been one of the leaders
in the anti-Amin resistance of 1971-1979 that had
led to the fall of that monstrous regime. |
Museveni, who has been politically active since his
student days at Ntare School, Mbarara, in south west
Uganda, studied political science at the University of Dar
es Salaam, graduating in 1970 with a Bachelor of Arts
degree in Economics and Political Science.
After Idi Amin’s coup in 1971, Museveni was
instrumental in forming Fronasa (the Front for National
Salvation). Fronasa made up the core of one of the Ugandan
fighting groups which, together with the Tanzanian
People’s Defence Forces, ousted Amin’s regime in April
1979.
The NRA was
unique in Africa
In the governments that
succeeded Amin, Museveni served briefly as Minister of
Defence, Minister of Regional Co-operation and
Vice-Chairman of the Military Commission. In December
1980, the country’s first general elections in 20 years
were held but they were rigged by Milton Obote’s Uganda
People’s Congress Party. During the election campaign,
Museveni had warned that if the elections were rigged, he
would fight Obote’s regime and on February 6, 1981, he
launched the guerrilla struggle. He went to the bush with
only 26 guns and organised the National Resistance Army
(NRA) to oppose the tyranny that Obote’s regime had
unleashed upon the population.
The NRA (now renamed the Uganda
People’s Defence Forces) is unique in Africa for being
the only guerrilla force to take over power without much
external support and without having a rear base in a
neighbouring country. Its main camps were based only 20
miles from the capital, Kampala. This demonstrated how the
NRA leadership was, in extremely difficult circumstances,
capable of achieving sophisticated levels of
organisational discipline and techniques for managing both
soldiers and civilians.
Early political
awareness
Yoweri Kaguta Museveni was born
in 1944 during the Second World War and his name was taken
from the Abaseveni, who were Ugandan servicemen in
the Seventh Regiment of the King’s African Rifles into
which many Ugandans had been drafted.
| He
was born in a peasant pastoralist background in
Ankole, western Uganda. As the peasants in his
home area were nomads, their children did not go to
school and
modern ideas about animal husbandry, hygiene and health
care did not percolate through to them. |
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In addition, they were
exploited and oppressed by land policies, such as
ranching schemes, which displaced them from their
traditional lands. Such policies were instituted by
the British colonialists and supported by local
collaborator chiefs and, later, by neo-colonialist
independence politicians.
Owing to his background
and his early determination to fight against
political and social injustices, Museveni decided in
1966 to lead a campaign mobilising the peasants in
northern Ankole to fence their land and refuse to
vacate it. The campaign was largely successful and
his political awareness and activity became more
focused during the three years (1967 to 1970) he
spent at the University of Dar es Salaam. His wide
reading covered Fanon, Lenin, Marx, Rodney, Mao, as
well as liberal Western thinkers like Galbraith.
These writers shaped his intellectual and political
outlook.
Compared to other
universities in the region, Dar es Salaam had a very
good, progressive atmosphere which gave the students
a chance to become familiar with pan-Africanist and
anti-colonialist ideas. This was due to the Pan-Africanist
views and policies of Mwalimu Julius Nyerere, the
President of Tanzania. Nevertheless, many professors
and lecturers were right wing in their views and
this often brought them into conflict with the
radical students.
The dissatisfaction with
the stance of the lecturers in 1967 led Museveni,
Eriya Kategaya, James Wapakhabulo, Joseph
Mulwanyamuli Ssemwogerere, John Kawanga, all from
Uganda, Charles Kileo and Salim Msoma from Tanzania,
Kapote Mwakasungura from Malawi, Adam Marwa and
Patrick Quoro also from Tanzania, John Garang from
Sudan, Andrew Shija from Tanzania, and many students
from other African countries, to form a self-help
ideological study and activist group known as the
University Students African Revolutionary Front (USARF).
Every Sunday they would hold a class, invite
speakers of their choice, enrich their ideas about
the evolution of society, and discuss topics dealing
with the production and distribution of wealth.
USARF was composed of
students from Kenya, Zambia, Malawi, Zimbabwe,
Ethiopia, Sudan, Tanzania and Uganda and Museveni
was elected its chairman for the whole time he was
at the university. USARF identified closely with
African liberation movements, especially Frelimo in
Mozambique, which the Front supported, for instance,
by producing pamphlets for their publicity work.
Other members of USARF were to become politically
active and influential both in Uganda and elsewhere
in Africa.
Pragmatic,
nationalist politician
Although President
Museveni is a man with very strong convictions, his
political vision on how to lay a foundation for
reconciliation and national harmony enabled him to
accommodate ideas that were often opposed to his.
One of his greatest contributions to the politics of
Uganda, therefore, has been to spearhead a policy of
reconciliation after two decades of social and
political turmoil. Under his leadership, the
Movement Government has ended the vicious circle of
vengeance and hatred that had ruined the country.
People from different tribes, religions and
political allegiances can now co-exist in harmony.
He accepts this
heterogeneity as a matter of course because it
mirrors the social spectrum of Ugandan society. He
formed a broad-based government and demonstrated to
Ugandans that although they had different political,
social and religious backgrounds, they had a lot in
common and a common destiny, contrary to the
divide-and-rule tactics previous politicians had
used to fragment Ugandan society.
He took pains to explain
that the typical Third World problems of poverty,
illiteracy, disease and general backwardness had
nothing to do with one’s religion or ethnic
origin. The NRM’s guiding Ten-Point Programme,
which was debated and agreed upon under his
chairmanship in 1984 during the bush war, basically
set out to redress the political and social wrongs
that were inflicted on the Ugandan people for
two-and-a-half decades. He says: "The National
Resistance Movement has an unwavering commitment to
the respect of human rights and the sanctity of
life. We waged a protracted war against tyranny on a
platform of restoring personal freedoms and the
amelioration of the socio-economic conditions of our
people – that is the cornerstone of our programme."
He has typically taken a
very independent political stand and says: "We
take from every system what is best for us and we
reject what is bad for us. We do not judge the
economic programmes of other nations because we
believe that each nation knows best how to address
the needs of its people. The NRM is neither pro-West
nor pro-East – it is pro-Uganda".
In July 1990, President Museveni
was elected the Chairman of the Organisation of
African Unity for the year 1990/91. As he said in
his acceptance speech, this was a vote of confidence
in the efforts of the National Resistance Movement
to build a just society with a democratic and
economically viable future for the nation. The
general consensus both at home and abroad, however,
was that his election was a vote of confidence in
the man himself. It showed that after only
four-and-a-half years in office, he was already an
international statesman of considerable standing.
A new
constitution for Uganda
When the National
Resistance Movement came to power in 1986, it
started working methodically towards taking Uganda
back to the constitutional road from which it had
been diverted by past regimes. A Constitutional
Commission was instituted to gather views from
Ugandans throughout the whole country. After two
years’ work traversing the whole country gathering
the people’s views, the Commission produced a
report from which a draft constitution was
extracted. A Constituent Assembly was elected and
tasked to debate and enact a new constitution.
When the Constituent Assembly was
opened on May 18, 1994, President Museveni
challenged the delegates: "We must ensure that
our political institutions spring from our social
structure. If we are to develop, we must evolve
institutional models which will liberate us from our
backwardness. We must modernize our societies and
lay the foundation for industrialization. We cannot modernize,
industrialize or develop without creating an
appropriate institutional framework within which to
work. It is the historic responsibility of this
Constituent Assembly to set our country on the path
to development and prosperity."
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Museveni
is a supporter of sports as he was an ardent
sportsman himself during his school
days. |
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Although the law
entitled him, as President, to address the
Constituent Assembly on any issue he wished,
he deliberately refused to influence the
proceedings. As a result, no individual or
political faction can dub the new constitution
a ‘Museveni’ document. This was a great
contribution to the constitution-making
process.
Delegates arrived at decisions either by
consensus or majority vote. However, he
advised delegates to combine flexibility on
contentious issues by distinguishing between
subjective demands and the objective realities
that faced the country.
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| The process culminated
in the promulgation of a new constitution on
October 8, 1995. Museveni says: "The NRM
has been like a political doctor trying to
solve the problems of Uganda. In order to
treat a disease, however, you must, first of
all, diagnose the illness." Ugandans
agree that the new constitution went a long
way towards healing the political and social
ills from which Uganda had suffered since
independence. It also laid a firm foundation
for the stability of the country for
generations to come.
First
directly elected President
In 1996, Museveni offered
himself as a candidate for President in the
first general elections since the abortive
attempt of 1980. Two other candidates,
including Paulo Ssemwogerere, the veteran
opposition leader who had been a minister in
the NRM Government for 10 years, opposed him.
Museveni won a landslide victory – with more
than 75 per cent of the vote – and became
the first directly elected President in the
history of Uganda.
In the last five years,
Museveni has initiated dramatic programmes
that are destined to transform the lives of
Ugandans forever. Grassroots-based programmes
in health, safe water provision and mass
education have replaced the shallow elite
programmes of the past that did not address
the needs of the majority of the people. At
the same time, Museveni has maintained
hard-nosed macro-economic stabilisation
policies that have controlled inflation below
10 per cent for the last nine years.
Consequently, the GDP of Uganda has doubled
over the 15 years that the Movement Government
has been in power. Absolute poverty has
reduced from 56 per cent to 44 per cent.
School enrolment in primary schools has jumped
from 2.5 million to 6.8 million children; and
universities have grown from one in 1986 to 13
by 2001. |
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Speech at the Pre-CHOGM Symposium On Science and TechnologyScience, Technology and Innovation: Key drivers for socio-economic Transformation 2007-09-17 I would like to thank Mbarara University of Science & Technology (MUST), Makerere University, the Uganda National Council for Science and Technology (UNCST), the Association of Commonwealth Universities (ACU), the Commonwealth Foundation (CF), the Royal Society of Chemistry (RSC), the British Council (BC), Uganda Office, for hosting this important symposium. Science is the primer of civilization as we know it today. When early man invented fire, it changed his whose lifestyle. Initially, man lived in trees, using primitive tools for hunting and eating raw food. With the invention of fire, he was able to cook his food, warm and protect himself, light his cave and make tools out of iron. The original tree-dweller moved down into caves and his pattern of life changed. ..more
President Pays Homage To Mwalimu Julius Nyerere At Butiama 2007-07-10 River Katonga is found in Uganda crossing Kampala –Masaka road at Mile 49. A historic battle took place across this river between the patriotic, nationalist forces of the new Uganda on the one hand and forces of the old colonial order on the other hand. This battle started in September, 1985 and ended with the victory of the revolutionary forces in December, 1985. After the historic victory, when the revolutionary forces took power, we created a constellation of medals for outstanding performance, the highest of which is Katonga, given for individual valour and heroism. It is the highest military honour given for service “beyond call of duty”. ..more
Budget Speech 2007 2007-06-14 Statement
By
His Excellency Yoweri Kaguta Museveni
President of the Republic of Uganda
On the Occasion of the Budget Speech 2007
14th June 2007
His Excellency the Vice President
Rt. Honourable Speaker of Parliament
His Lordship The Chief Justice
Rt. Honourable Deputy Speaker
Her Lordship Deputy Chief Justice ..more
Speech At The 12th International Berlin Gathering 2007-06-14 Statement By
Yoweri Kaguta Museveni
President of the Republic of Uganda
On
Responsibility before God and the Inviolability of Human dignity
At the 12th International Berlin Gathering
Berlin, Germany
14th June 2007 ..more
State of the Nation Address 2007 2007-06-13 H.E. Yoweri Kaguta Museveni
President of the Republic of Uganda
Presents the
State of the Nation Address 2007
H.E. the Vice President of Uganda
Rt. Honourable Speaker of Parliament
His Lordship the Chief Justice
Rt. Honourable Prime Minister
Rt. Honourable Deputy Speaker of Parliament
Vice Chairman of the National Resistance Movement
The Honourable Members of Parliament
Members of the Diplomatic Corps
Ladies and Gentlemen ..more
Speech to Law Society 2007-03-20 Statement by
H.E. Yoweri Kaguta Museveni
President of the Republic of Uganda
To the Uganda Law Society
18th March 2007
The Attorney General;
Honourable Ministers present;
The President of the Law Society and his Council;
Members of the Learned Profession; ..more
Commonwealth Day Speech for 2007 2007-03-15 Statement By
H.E. Yoweri Kaguta Museveni
President of the Republic of Uganda
On the Commonwealth Day
We are gathered here today to mark the Commonwealth Day. It is a day of unique importance. It signifies the common desire of a significant portion of humanity to rise above history and celebrate the oneness, commonality of interests and shared values that as of right should unite humankind. ..more
State Of The Nation Address on New Year's Day 2007 2007-01-01 STATE OF THE NATION ADDRESS
ON NEW YEAR’S DAY - 2007
BY
HIS EXCELLENCY YOWERI KAGUTA MUSEVENI
PRESIDENT OF THE REPUBLIC UGANDA
1st January 2006
Fellow Countrymen,
..more
CHALLENGES OF GOVERNANCE 2006-11-17 Your Excellency the President of the European Commission,
Your Excellencies Heads of State and Government,
Commissioners of the European Commission,
Ladies and Gentlemen.
I have been in leadership for the last forty one (41) years (since 1965). ..more
President's speech at 2006 Annual Conference & General Meeting of The East Africa Law Society 2006-10-27 Speech By H.E. Yoweri Kaguta Museveni
President of the Republic of Uganda
At the Opening Ceremony of
The 2006 Annual Conference
And General Meeting of
The East Africa Law Society
Speke Resort Munyonyo
Kampala
26th October 2006
The President of the East African Law Society and the other Presidents of the National Law Societies; ..more
Speech at Official Opening of the Second Annual International Conference 2006-08-06 Speech By
H.E. Yoweri Kaguta Museveni
President of the Republic of Uganda
At the Official Opening of the Second Annual International Conference on SUSTAINABLE ICT CAPACITY IN DEVELOPING COUNTRIES
Makerere University
Kampala, Uganda
7th August 2006 ..more
President Museveni swearing in speech 2006-05-12 On behalf of the People of Uganda, I welcome their Excellencies, President Mwai Kibaki of Kenya and Jakaya Kikwete of Tanzania, who are my colleagues in the East African Summit of Heads of State to this function. I also welcome Their Excellencies: Robert Mugabe, of the Republic of Zimbabwe; Thabo Mbeki of the South African Republic; Meles Zenawi of Ethiopia; Paul Kagame of the Republic of Rwanda; Armando Emilio Guebuza of Mozambique; Abdullahi Yusuf of Somalia; Ismaili Omar Guelleh of Djibouti; Mohammed Abdeleziz of Saharawi; Pierre Nkurunziza of Burundi who are members of the African Union (AU) Heads of State Summit for coming to this occasion. ..more
History of Uganda 2005-11-26 What is Uganda?
Uganda is a country of 250,000 square kilometres, very fertile and rich in terms of natural resources, with, presently, a population of 28 million people. The population was only 14 million in 1986 when our political movement, the National Resistance Movement (NRM), came into power. The rapid increase in population has been, partly, due to the improved conditions. ..more
President's speech at G8 summit Sea Island/Georgia 2004-06-09 Mr. Chairman,
Africa is a Continent of 11 million square miles and 800 million people. 700 million of them are Black people – the original stock of the human race. Although Africa is the origin of Man and the human beings did not start populating other Continents until 100,000 years ago,[1] the population of Africa remained small. In 1900 the population of Africa was only 110 million. The African population stagnated mainly because of the enemies of Man that also thrive in the ambient climate of Africa – tse-tse flies, mosquitoes and microbes.
..more
THE 1ST ANNUAL INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE AND WORKSHOP ON SUSTAINABLE ICT CAPACITY IN DEVELOPING COUNTRIES 2005-08-09 I must, first of all, express my profound pleasure of being invited to participate in this important first Annual International Conference and Workshop on Sustainable ICT Capacity in Developing Countries.
During the last century, the developed world changed from Agricultural Society, where manual labour was a critical factor to an Industrial Society, where the management of technology, capital and labour provided a competitive advantage.
..more
President Museveni addresses the nation on forthcoming referendum 2005-07-13 Dear Countrymen and women,
I have come here, today, to address you on the question of the Referendum that is due on the 28th of July 2005. Before I talk about the Referendum, let me give you a brief history of the peoples of Uganda, their fortunes and misfortunes in governance over the Centuries and the recent minimum recovery, superintended over by the NRM. Even before 900 AD, a number of areas that are now Uganda ..more
Labour Day Speech 2005 2005-05-01 Ladies and Gentlemen,
I salute all of you.
My speech at Kololo will be read by H.E. the Vice President, Professor Gilbert Bukenya. I am reading the same speech, at this very moment, in Fort Portal, where I had a long-standing “Meet the People” engagement that we had to push to the Labour Day because of the historic debate and vote in Parliament last Thursday (28.04.05). As many of the National Resistance Movement Members of Parliament as possible had to be in Parliament on Thursday, to ensure that the People’s power is protected against those forces that want to usurp it. ..more
THE VISION, MISSION AND STRATEGIC PLAN OF ACTION OF THE AFRICAN UNION 2004-07-06 ADDIS ABABA
Mr. Chairman,
My delegation has had an opportunity to critically study the various documents related to the Vision, Mission and the Strategic Frame work of the AU as articulated by the Chairperson of the Commission, Prof. Alpha Oumar Konare and his able team. That he has been able to crystallize such a clear vision on the future of the continent within a short time of his adminstration, demonstrates his illustrious leadership and unwavering commitment to the cause of mother Africa. He must be congratulated for rising to the occasion. ..more
TOKYO INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE 2003-09-29 Address to TOKYO INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ON AFRICAN DEVELOPMENT (TICAD) III
As you all know, Africa is the cradle of mankind. All human beings (Homo sapien sapien) emanated from Africa. Evidence has now shown that until 100,000 years ago, all human beings were living only in Africa. It is, therefore, tragic and paradoxical that when the out-of Africa human beings came back to that Continent, around the 15th Century, they came as predators – slave traders, colonizers, etc. The last 500 years of interaction between Africans and Europeans, in particular, has not been a happy one. It has not been an equitable one. Africans were also involuntarily involved in a war with Japan in Burma on behalf of European colonizers. ..more
Evolution and Modernization of Society 2002-02-09 Army Officers on a Company Commanders’ Course, at Junior Staff College, Jinja.
This small booklet, The Movement’s Long Struggle for the Liberation of Uganda, was made out of an address I gave some time back. I was dealing with the sort of subject that you may be interested in; I was talking about the development of human society. How has the human society developed? People do not spend time to know society, and how it developed. They do not know much about this subject – you hear different theories about it. ..more
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