Comment

When I became a man, I put away my toy gun

Share Bookmark Print Email
Email this article to a friend

Submit Cancel
Rating

 

By CHARLES ONYANGO-OBBO  (email the author)
Email this article to a friend

Submit Cancel


Posted  Monday, March 8  2010 at  00:00

A picture of Uganda’s President Yoweri Museveni visiting mudslide victims in military uniform and an AK-47 strapped across his chest has created quite a buzz in the blogsphere.

To critics, it is the best representation of the ham-fisted military-cum-civilian regime that runs Uganda.

One blogger asked if he carried the gun in order to shoot survivors of the mudslide.

President Museveni, who came to power at the head of a victorious rebel army in 1986, declared with quite some fanfare that he was hanging up his military uniform and “putting on a civilian tunic” after he was elected in 1996.

However, his life as a civilian president has not quite brought him the prestige and credibility as did his role as the leader of the first home-based guerrilla movement to overthrow an independent African government.

Corruption, nepotism, expansionist misadventure in the Democratic Republic of Congo, and the nastiness that his security services have had to resort to keep opponents in check, means his post-bush era is more tainted than his days as a liberator.

Share This Story
Share

Because of that, Museveni has found it hard to put the military behind him.

Whenever the country is caught up a political crisis, he dives into his military fatigues, takes to national TV, and bangs tables and warns opponents.

What is more, despite his “retirement”, he has continued to promote himself. Now he is a lieutenant general.

Museveni is not the only military man turned civilian president in East Africa and the wider region.

There are no less than four in our immediate vicinity: Ethiopia’s Meles Zenawi, Rwanda’s Paul Kagame, Sudan’s Omar al-Bashir, Southern Sudan’s Salva Kiir.

In most respects, they all fought a more bitter and trying war, or a longer campaign as guerrilla leaders, but when they came to power, they put away their guns and uniforms forever.

Because he is nearing the age of 70, Museveni cuts a rather ungainly figure in his military uniform, and with his AK-47 he looks like a grown man who will not let go of his boyhood toys.

However, it would be an oversimplification to see only that psychological explanation — because dress and talismans seem to play a role in African politics that they no longer do elsewhere.

In the past, most African presidents liked to bring their own style to dress; hence to Zambia’s Kenneth Kaunda, we owe what is now known in as the “Kaunda suit.” Tanzania’s Julius Nyerere gave us the “Nyerere suit.”

1 | 2 Next Page »

Add a comment (0 comments so far)

.

IN PICTURES: Congo clashes

In a hand-out photograph released by the African Union-United Nations Information Support Team May 2, 2012 outgoing African Union Mission in Somalia (AMISOM) force commander Major General Fred Mugisha (left) prepares to hand over command to his successor, Ugandan Lt. General Andrew Gutti (right) at a ceremony at the mission's headquarters in the Somali capital, Mogadishu. Mugisha had commanded the AU force since early August 2011. Photo/AFP

AMISOM handover

Malawi's late president Bingu wa Mutharika's supporter wears a "Bingu rest in peace" tee-shirt as he stands in front of the Mpumulo wa Bata Mausoleum during his funeral at his Ndata farm residence in the district of Thyolo, southern Malawi, on April 23, 2012. Photo/AFP/Amos Gumulira

Final send off for Mutharika

Sudanese carry an Armed Forces officer as they gather outside the Defence Ministry in the capital Khartoum on April 20, 2012 to celebrate retaking the oil town of Heglig from South Sudanese forces. Border clashes between Sudan and South Sudan escalated last week with waves of air strikes hitting the South, and Juba seizing the north's Heglig oil hub on April 10.  PHOTO/AFP/ASHRAF SHAZLY

Sudan celebrates retaking Heglig