By BARBARA AMONG and DANIEL KALINAK
Adapted from the EAST AFRICAN
Since 1986, power in Uganda has been centralised in the neighbourhoods of Nakasero, where one of two main presidential complexes is located, and Kololo, where most of the regime’s top brass settled.
Adapted from the EAST AFRICAN
Since 1986, power in Uganda has been centralised in the neighbourhoods of Nakasero, where one of two main presidential complexes is located, and Kololo, where most of the regime’s top brass settled.
Just above the Kololo Independence Grounds is the
house in which Museveni spent the night on January 25, when his troops
took power. When Museveni left for State House, it fell into the hands
of Eriya Kategaya, then the de-facto regime number two.
MBABAZI |
Many of the regime’s historical figures have moved
on and away. Some, like Mr Kategaya are dead. Others like General Salim
Saleh, Museveni’s brother, have moved on to palatial homes away from
the heart of the city, giving way to diplomats and Kampala’s nouveau
riche.
Prime Minister Amama Mbabazi is one of the few
remaining historicals in the city’s traditional power neighbourhoods,
his house only minutes away from the Independence Grounds, Parliament,
and the corridors of power.
While probably only coincidental, this metaphor is
a symbolic reminder that Mr Mbabazi is one of the last men standing
from the original political group of President Museveni’s
contemporaries.
Now an attempt is underway to chop off his
political feet amidst allegations that he has been quietly building a
financial base and mobilisation structures to eventually replace
President Museveni as party leader and head of state.
In many countries, ambition
among politicians is expected, even demanded. However, in a country
that has had one president for three decades, and has never seen the
peaceful handover of one elected leader to another in five decades of
independence, ambition is a risky thing to have and dangerous to display
openly.
MUSEVENI AND MBABAZI AT NRM CONFERENCE |
The anti-Mbabazi camp has three major
constituencies: Fellow senior party officials who see him as a political
rival for any situation vacant; young party officials who, in smelling
the Prime Minister’s political blood, have seen an opportunity to
advance their own careers; and the “Musevenists” who have vested
personal interests in the status quo.
Some historicals are openly critical of Mr
Mbabazi, including Kahinda Otafiire and former vice president Gilbert
Bukenya whom he defeated in the secretary general election.
Other historicals quietly accuse Mr Mbabazi of
being behind their woes, be it prosecution on corruption-related
charges, or simply being put out to pasture within the government.
Still many others in the party blame their
electoral defeats, particularly in the hotly contested and controversial
party primaries, on Mr Mbabazi who was in charge of the process.
The “Young Turks” are an interesting but important
dynamic. Some like Evelyn Anite, who moved the controversial proposal
to endorse President Museveni as the sole party candidate, and Youth
Minister Ronald Kibuule, were previously close to Mr Mbabazi and, in
some cases, beneficiaries of his political backing.
Their about-turns are not just a case of political
opportunism with an eye on the next election, says a political watcher
in Kampala familiar with the power play within the government.
First attack
“They have been deliberately targeted and recruited in order to
turn the large youthful vote, both within the party and outside it, to
the president’s camp.”
At the heart of the anti-Mbabazi campaign,
however, is a core group of Musevenists, including members of the first
family and their close associates, who are keen to keep the president in
power.
Interviews conducted by The EastAfrican
with officials in both camps, many of whom insisted on speaking on
condition of anonymity because of the sensitivity of the matter, reveal
that the struggle between the two camps has been simmering for more than
five years.
First attack
The first attack on Mr Mbabazi took place in 2008,
when he was accused of using his influence to compel the National
Social Security Fund to buy land belonging to him and businessman Amos
Nzeyi.
A parliamentary inquiry and a subsequent criminal
investigation cleared Mr Mbabazi but some of the evidence leaked to the
media, including forged cheques stolen from his daughter’s car, left
fingerprints that suggested the organised hand of a puppet master.
If that transaction was forgiven, it was not
forgotten. Intelligence analysis suggests that Mr Mbabazi, who was
selling the land in order to capitalise the National Bank of Commerce in
which he and Nzeyi were major shareholders, was building a financial
war chest and had to be watched.
Mr Mbabazi and his wife last week admitted to
mobilising support within the NRM, but said they had done so to counter
unfair attempts to force the prime minister to resign from his position
as secretary general.
Investigations reveal, however, that the fight
over the secretary general position is the extension of a long-drawn out
effort to keep Mr Mbabazi in check.
The intelligence community continued to raise red
flags about the Prime Minister’s networks, especially with the Israeli
security establishment and Chinese business players.
Sources indicated that the intelligence agencies
also took a keen interest in the activities of Ms Mbabazi, including her
foreign travel and photo-ops with foreign dignitaries, prompting one
close ally of President Museveni to scoff that she was “practicing for
the role of First Lady.”
Behind the designer handbags and smile of Ms
Mbabazi, however, lay a thick-skinned operator who was as soft-spoken in
the limelight as she was outspoken in the background.
The pro-Museveni camp was alarmed when an
intelligence briefing reported that Ms Mbabazi, who was the head of a
government munitions factory under the army-owned National Enterprises
Corporation, had assisted some senior military officers in constructing
their private residential homes.
The EastAfrican has learnt that people
around Mr Museveni saw this as an attempt by Ms Mbabazi to build a power
base within the military. The picture that emerged among the
pro-Museveni camp was of an empire-building exercise in progress.
New strategy
Last attempt
A political counter-attack was swiftly organised.
First, Ms Mbabazi was removed from her position as head of the munitions firm and retained as a presidential adviser.
Ms Mbabazi declined to be interviewed by The EastAfrican but
sources close to her said the intelligence analysis had been greatly
exaggerated, but admitted that she had been invited to explain herself
over the matter in meetings with “senior regime officials.”
Then, the Central Bank shut down the National Bank
of Commerce and transferred its business to Crane Bank in what
pro-Mbabazi sources claim was an attempt to curtail Mr Mbabazi’s
political ambitions by restricting his financial influence. The matter
is still before court.
The next target was Mr Mbabazi. President Museveni
could fire him as prime minister, but that would give him time to
concentrate on the party and entrench himself further across the
country.
An alternative strategy — to prise the secretary
general job away through a meeting of the NRM National Executive
Committee last year — failed after party leaders queued up before the
microphone and openly accused President Museveni of double standards in
picking on Mr Mbabazi.
New strategy
“By the time Mzee [President Museveni] cut short
the discussion on the matter, he was convinced that Mr Mbabazi’s support
in the party was something he had to address,” a senior regime
official, who asked not to be named because of the sensitivity of the
matter, told this newspaper.
The pro-Museveni camp planned a new strategy to
force the issue; this would involve using a snowball effect, the element
of surprise, and a win-win offer. The party’s parliamentary caucus was a
good starting place to build momentum.
First, Mr Mbabazi and the party structures were
kept completely out of the planning for the event; the attack, when it
came, caught the PM “completely by surprise,” according to one of the
PM’s allies.
Secondly, although the caucus does not have the
authority to fire the secretary general or force their resignation, it
has many MPs willing to catch the eye of the incumbent and can get more
party members to endorse the decision to have a full-time secretary
general.
On average, according to recent statistics, six
out of every 10 MPs are not re-elected in Uganda; with many MPs looking
wearily at the upcoming election, backing President Museveni offers a
chance for personal reward or, at the very least, an expectation of
support in the party primaries, which, in many areas where the
opposition is weak, makes the NRM candidate a sure winner.
The strategy was bold and aggressive, but it had
one flaw; it did not anticipate the response to Mr Mbabazi’s open
humiliation by the public or the PM’s loyalists in different arms of the
government.
Last attempt
At the last attempt against Mr Mbabazi’s camp, the
Marriage Bill was a useful diversion. The Anti-homosexuality Act was
signed in public, and although it generated alternative publicity,
President Museveni had to walk over the lingering burning embers of the
political contest.
NRM MPs are to be sent out to the constituencies to sell
President Museveni’s sole candidature for the 2016 elections, but the
political attack on Mr Mbabazi has, ironically, raised the Prime
Minister’s stature.
“If he is worthy of such an attack, and if he can
scare President Museveni so much, then there must be something about
him,” said Martin Ddungu, a businessman at a cafĂ© in Kampala. “Either he
is a bad man or he is a good man they are scared of; either way I want
to know.”
A lot will depend on how Mr Mbabazi responds, and
on the outcome of a quiet on-going purge of the PM’s allies within
government. Mr Mbabazi has worked with the president for four decades
and has said publicly that he knows President Museveni well.
Conventional wisdom suggests that is a good thing,
but Mr Mbabazi only has to look around the plush suburbs of Kololo and
Nakasero to see how few of his fellow historicals and erstwhile
neighbours are still part of the ruling circle.
In Part II next week, we argue that few
people who have been loyal to Museveni have come out ahead; few good
deeds have gone unpunished.
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