I only wish Mary Okurut had said these words when her boss Dictator Museveni 
said in broad day light recently when he was in Luweero that he would have gone 
back to the bush if the anti-NRM coalition had worn the election in which 
Semmogerere had been their nomination. Just change all the Besigye name here to 
Museveni. 
  Mary Okurut just like the whole lot of them are good at attacking everybody 
else but not their own.
   
  Bwambuga.

Mitayo Potosi <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
    It is funny that Mary Okurut Karooro is now making much more sense than 
Besigye !!
  Can you believe it ?
  ==========================
          Besigye is dancing on the graves of the dead Kenyans    Wednesday, 
23rd January, 2008             E-mail article        Print article      Karooro 
Okurut 

THE call by opposition leader Dr. Kizza Besigye for Ugandans to 'emulate 
Kenyans' in is quite easily one of the most deadly statements that have been 
made this year around East Africa. 

Besigye was quoted by The New Vision as telling people at public rallies in 
Bushenyi last Friday as saying: "Do not be intimidated. Stand up and fight for 
your country. The Kenyans are not fighting for Raila Odinga. They are fighting 
for their rights." 

He is further quoted as having urged the youth: "A leader who is a dictator 
cannot leave power like that. You have to push him. That is why you see in 
Kenya two groups fighting, because of politics of segregation." 

Officially, close to 700 people have been killed in three weeks of 
unprecedented violence in Kenya, a rather bloody aftermath of the controversial 
election, which saw President Mwai Kibaki retain power. 

Hundreds of thousands have been displaced, with many of them fleeing to Uganda, 
itself an earlier beneficiary of Kenyan hospitality in the 1970s and 80s when 
bad leadership forced many into exile. 

While it is perfectly okay in principle for people to fight for their rights, 
it is a different kettle of fish when the example being floated for emulation 
is the Kenyan bloodbath. 

A seemingly stable society has been ripped apart in a matter of weeks by ethnic 
conflict, as chiefly the Luo and the Kikuyu systematically butcher each other, 
the latter apparently the hunted. Innocent people have been rounded up and 
callously chopped to pieces. Many more have escaped with ghastly machete 
wounds. 

Women have been gang-raped with no one to come to their aid. Bows and arrows, 
machetes and hoes and guns of course, have been put to deadly use with 
incredible passion that surely has little to do with a disputed election. In 
possibly the most ghastly incident, a predominantly Kikuyu church in western 
Kenya was burned down, with scores of people who had run into it for refuge, 
burned to cinders. 

Those who took refuge in Uganda were actually followed and their food poisoned 
in an attempt to wipe them out! 

A booming economy, especially the tourism sector has been brought onto its 
knees; but the damage is nothing compared to the social fabric that has been 
torn to shreds. So is Dr. Besigye now saying we should emulate sections of 
Kenyan society by carrying out a mini-genocide? 

Should we come out with all the grisly instruments of violence—machetes, bows 
and arrows, spears and guns and decimate each other in the name of fighting for 
rights? 

What rights have been violated to such an extent that they warrant 
ethnically-driven bloodshed? Could it be that after twice failing to access 
power by civil means, Besigye is now clearly advocating the use of havoc, 
mayhem and wide-ranging bloodshed to do so? And that he seems so inclined to 
getting power that he no longer cares what means he employs? Would he be happy 
to see Ugandans kill each other free style, as long as his objectives are 
achieved? 

The answer to all these questions, in the context of his call, seems positive; 
and suggests that he is all out for power-at-any-price in a 
means-justifies-the-end kind of way. 

This bizarre and bloody call by Besigye should serve to bring into focus once 
again the role of the opposition in Uganda which has been accused of merely 
wanting power and having no credible alternative panacea for the country's 
development conundrum. 

Analysts have argued that this, in addition to President Yoweri Museveni's 
excellent performance are possibly the two main reasons he is still in power. 
In the unlikely event that Besigye took over power, what kind of society would 
he have? 

Instead of romanticising and glamourising the Kenyan bloodshed, in effect 
dancing on the graves of dead Kenyans, a true leader would be condemning the 
violence and calling upon the belligerents to keep ethnic sentiments and 
electoral emotions in check and give dialogue a chance in a peaceful 
surrounding. 

Ethnic violence is primitive and deadly in more ways than one. Quite often, 
societies that suffer ethnic violence never recover and suffer balkanisation – 
a geopolitical term that refers to the fragmentation of a country into small, 
hostile states that are usually uncooperative with each other to the extent 
that sometimes it seems each exists for the sole purpose of extinguishing the 
other. 

Anybody remember a country called Yugoslavia that is now extinct just because 
of ethnic conflict? Well, the Yugoslav wars (1991-2001), a series of violent 
conflicts between the six former Yugoslav republics should be a perfect example 
that ethnic conflict cannot only decimate a society, but that its repercussions 
last and last. 

We hope and pray that the situation in Kenya be resolved, so that this great 
country can resume from where it left off. 

If those aspiring to be the next leaders of Uganda are the types that have no 
qualms calling for ethnic violence as a tool of achieving their goals, then I 
can only say: "Cry the beloved country!" 


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