Editorial

Uganda speaks with forked tongue…

Share Bookmark Print Email
Email this article to a friend

Submit Cancel
Rating
Email this article to a friend

Submit Cancel


Posted  Monday, July 20  2009 at  00:00

Just how solid is Uganda's word and who speaks for the country?

This is a legitimate question after last week’s events that saw Kampala flip-flop between appeasing the International Criminal Court, which has issued arrest warrants against Sudan’s President Omar al Bashir, and sticking with the pack after the African Union passed a resolution against any efforts to arrest Bashir.

Somehow, Uganda’s political leadership expected to land on the right side of both camps.

Having got the ICC to issue warrants against the leaders of its own Lord’s Resistance Army, Uganda was expected to be a natural ally in any future search for fugitives from international justice.

This is what must have been on the mind of ICC chief prosecutor Luis Moreno Ocampo when he made a beeline for Kampala after learning that the indicted Bashir was scheduled to make an appearance at the Smart Partnership Dialogue that Uganda is hosting this week.

Kampala did not disappoint.

Share This Story
Share

Junior Foreign Minister Henry Okello Oryem told a press conference that Uganda had an obligation to execute the ICC warrants and went on to suggest that Bashir would be arrested if he set foot in Kampala.

Hours later, a thoroughly embarrassed Kampala was scrambling to do damage control.

In the event, Bashir chose to delegate his deputy as President Yoweri Museveni avoided a potentially charged summit of the Non-Aligned Movement in Sham el Sheik, Egypt.

Uganda risks a crisis of credibility. Taking stands and then backtracking from them to suit different occasions, is hardly the way to earn respect.

Add a comment (0 comments so far)

.

IN PICTURES: Egyptians protest military rule

Pope Benedict XVI blesses children at St. Gall Seminary in Ouidah on November 19, 2011. Pope Benedict XVI arrived in Benin on November 18, marking his second visit to Africa in a heartland of voodoo and warning against "unconditional submission" to the laws of the market and finance.    AFP PHOTO /VINCENZO PINTO

IN PICTURES: Pope Benedict XVI in Benin

For the first time in over three years, Somalis venture out to their beaches November 19, 2011showing a new sense of security since the militant group al-Shabaab, aligned with al-Qaeda, retreated from Mogadishu in August. Photo/XINHUA

IN PICTURES: Somalis return to beaches

Somali Prime Minister Abdiweli Mohamed Ali, talks to a famine victim at Mogadishu's largest camp on November 19, 2011. Photo/XINHUA

IN PICTURES: Somali PM visits largest IDP camp