Why democracy and development failed in Uganda
By Timothy Kalyegira
Posted Sunday, October 21 2012 at 01:00

In Summary

Widespread fear. Most of Ugandan society lacks confidence. Most of the
President's Cabinet ministers cannot look him directly in the eye. Most of
the public trembles in the presence of army generals.
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Why democracy and development failed in Uganda

What does one do when a week comes by and one has nothing to write about?
That is what I feel this week and, increasingly, these days.

We have said practically all there is to say about Ugandan elections,
politics, governance, corruption, political party infighting, nepotism,
westerners taking most top jobs, incompetence in the civil service and the
government and the lack of everything in Uganda (drugs in hospitals, clean
drinking water and sanitation, jobs and street lights).

The quality of newspaper, magazine, book, TV and radio coverage of Uganda's
50th independence anniversary in the months leading up to October 9, 1012,
suggested that intellectual life in Uganda in 50 years has not yet attained
fruition.

The society has not yet attained depth in research, archived material and
investigative skills. This takes me to something I've been thinking about
over the last several months: the Megapixels in digital photography. These
are the millions of dots that, like with a television or computer screen,
come together to form the image that we see.

Complicated technical details and other considerations aside, in general the
higher the number of megapixels a digital camera has, the better the quality
of images it takes. In the world of photography, 12 Megapixels (12MP) is now
considered the minimum for professional-looking photographs.

Uganda and the low megapixel countries
The question of megapixels in digital photography has given me a metaphor of
the limitations in Ugandan and most African societies.
When Uganda attained independence in 1962, it had a low intellectual base
and 50 years later, there has been a slight improvement but that's about it.

Even with several general elections held, parliaments elected, secondary
schools and universities pumping out people with academic qualifications,
there is still something lacking in Uganda.

That problem, as I see it, is that we are low on societal megapixels. For a
society to be ranked as advanced, it needs a large megapixel count, so to
speak.

It needs to have a large number of mainstream professionals like medical
doctors, lawyers, teachers, journalists, accountants and engineers. These
basic "marketable" professionals were few in number among Black Ugandans for
the first 20 years of independence.

But even now with that number greatly increased, Uganda still suffers a low
megapixel count. If Uganda were a camera, I would estimate it at about three
megapixels, the most basic digital camera type.

Uganda, Tanzania, Kenya, Rwanda, Zambia and other such countries generally
fall in this three megapixel economic and social category. Since the
explosion of FM radio stations in Uganda in the mid 1990s and the growth of
the advertising industry, marketing and sales executives and freelance radio
and newspaper reporters and photographers have become more visible in
society and generally higher paid than they were in the 1980s.

But they are still on a shaky footing and most freelancers, be they in
marketing or journalism, report that it is an uphill struggle to make ends
meet from month-to-month.

The four-megapixel to 10-megapixel countries
To move from a three-megapixel societal standard to a lower middle income
country like Egypt or Tunisia, other professions must become middle class
and fully-paying. These include photographers, graphic designers, furniture
makers, sign painters, librarians, agriculture and veterinary extension
workers, marketing and sales executives and any work that is done by
freelancers.

In the Arab North Africa, book authors and professionals like poets,
photographers and librarians are busy, respected people. They can earn a
basically decent living from their skills. Apart from South Africa, North
Africa and Muslim Sudan have the highest percentage of Internet use, book
purchases and newspaper readership in Africa.

There are very few authors, if any, in Uganda who can earn a monthly wage
and financial sustenance from the sales or licensing of their poems, books
or photographs. 

Ugandans who take photographs for weddings and some who take photographs for
corporate billboards are the only type in this profession who earn a middle
class income. Librarians are still viewed as largely irrelevant and obscure
professionals.

The 12 to 16-megapixel countries
In this category are to be found Eastern Europe, the Arab Gulf states, parts
of southern Europe and Latin America and South Africa. Literacy is
relatively high, purchasing power also high, the kinds of professions that
Ugandans view as embarrassing such as veterinary medicine, librarian
sciences, botany, zoology, agriculture, forestry, poetry and others do
fairly well.

One does not need to be a lawyer, doctor, MBA holder, company executive
director, businessman, engineer or architect to do well financially. A
veterinary doctor can earn a high income treating thoroughbred horses that
take part in the Dubai or Abu Dhabi racing classic.

The 20-megapixel countries
These are the most intellectually-developed countries. The United States,
Britain, Italy, Japan, South Korea, Canada, China, Russia, Australia,
Switzerland, Germany, Taiwan, France, Sweden, Norway, Austria and that kind
of country.

In such high-income, high megapixel, high-intellectual societies, anything
is possible in life. Even the unemployed in most of these countries still
earn what in Uganda would be regarded as a decent monthly wage.
Odd jobs, "kyeyo", working in elderly people's homes, being a nurse, vet,
archaeologist, painter, philosopher, poet, soil scientist, graphic designer,
website designer, space scientist, librarian, marine biology, teacher,
everything called a profession is well-regarded and pays well, at least by
world standards.

Every branch of human knowledge is fully developed, every possible career
makes sense. A man who decides to set a new world record in air balloon
flight can become as much a celebrity as a popular TV talk show host.
The true intellectual advancement of these 20-megapix societies can be seen
in the high number of new book titles they publish each year, the number of
newspaper, magazine titles in print and the huge number of websites that are
in operation.

All this, of course, is just a rough sketch by which I am trying to
illustrate the point that the concentration of human intellect and social
weight is still very low in Uganda and it is this low intellectual base,
this low megapixel count, that explains so much of what we see in Uganda and
which puzzles us.

Most of Ugandan society lacks confidence. Most of the President's Cabinet
ministers cannot look him directly in the eye. Most of the public trembles
in the presence of army generals.

Most Ugandans "fear" their LCIII chairperson. What a `Big Man' says is
obeyed with few questions asked. At President Yoweri Museveni's press
conference held at his Rwakitura country home, the UBC TV cameras often
turned to the assembled journalists.

Most were junior reporters and editors and most were visibly overwhelmed
just to be sitting within five metres of the Head of State.
When Members of Parliament meet the President, both opposition and the
ruling NRM, most sit uneasily in their chairs and when they stand up to
speak, even opposition MPs make it a point to stress that "I have nothing
personal against you, Your Excellency". Most Ugandan employees are terrified
of the Managing Director or the General Manager.

The headmasters and headmistresses are semi-gods in their schools.
Magistrates and High Court judges throughout Uganda's 50-year independence
history, even when they know full well that they belong to an independent
and important third branch of government, have often buckled under pressure
from State House, the President, powerful ministers and aggressive military
commanders.

In these kinds of societies, everything is paid lip-service. The society
lacks the clout, backbone, confidence and in-depth knowledge to stand up for
their rights, to do what they do without fear of the authorities.
This is what, in short, makes Uganda and countries like it, three-megapixel
societies. They are weak economically and politically, because they are
first and foremost, weak in intellectual life.

[email protected] <mailto:timothy_kalyegira%40yahoo.com> 

 

           Thé Mulindwas Communication Group
"With Yoweri Museveni and Dr. Kiiza Besigye Uganda is in anarchy"
           Kuungana Mulindwa Mawasiliano Kikundi
"Pamoja na Yoweri Museveni na Dk. Kiiza Besigye Uganda ni katika machafuko"

 

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