There is no doubt to Bugandas total recovery with the certain
overthrow Obote's disciple Museveni! And of all Uganda.

On 7/23/13, Herrn Edward Mulindwa <[email protected]> wrote:
> Daudi Kasirye
>
> And at the end of the day trust me Buganda with its Kingdom are way screwed
> than any part of Uganda.  For either way you slice The Movement departure,
> the North is on rebound, East is on rebound, Western Uganda will face some
> deaths but will with time rebound. The danger with Buganda is that all
> those
> that are rebounding, are starting to understand the sacrifice they suffer
> by
> Buganda's stupidity. It is so funny that someone today sent me a text that
> made me ponder and it was very simple. Museveni is a very smart man he has
> managed to tie Buganda and UPC in a same relationship.  In all damage he
> has
> done in Uganda, do you actually know Olara Otunu's stand let alone
> Ssabassajja Mutebi's?
>
> Then she went        "Byona biferire bifangagana !!!!!!  Whew !
>
> EM
> On the 49th
>
>            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"
>
>
> -----Original Message-----
> From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] On
> Behalf
> Of daudi kasirye
> Sent: Tuesday, July 23, 2013 11:15 PM
> To: [email protected]
> Cc: Oryema Johnson; [email protected]; G_NET
> Subject: Re: [Ugnet] {UAH} Is Buganda still relevant as a monarchy in the
> 21st century?
>
> Very intelligent! twice overthrown. UPC dead and buried. th North cowed and
> raped. Very intelligent.
>
> On 7/23/13, Herrn Edward Mulindwa <[email protected]> wrote:
>> Ggwe George Ssendiwala
>>
>>
>>
>> Yoweri Museveni has lead this country for almost 30 years, the only
>> people he has killed apart from Northerners and Easterners are only
>> Baganda. And yet there is no single indication to show that he is about
>> to
> leave power.
>> 85 of babies born in Buganda today are fathered by Rwandese even those
>> that think are fathered by Baganda men. Wabula wakyaliwo Enungu eyimba
>> mbu without Buganda there is no Uganda. Look all money has gone to
>> Mbarara and Kampala has been turned into a cows feeding shack. Allow
>> me to quote you one thing my dear friend George Ssendiwala what a very
>> intelligent man said on Uganda. You can win a Uganda election without
>> winning a single constituency in Buganda.  –Dr Apollo Milton Obote
>>
>>
>>
>> Awo oli ku Pokopoko era byoyogedde bya’Swakaba !!!!!
>>
>>
>>
>> EM
>> On the 49th
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>            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"
>>
>>
>>
>> From: [email protected]
>> [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of George
>> Ssendiwala
>> Sent: Tuesday, July 23, 2013 10:24 AM
>> To: [email protected]
>> Subject: Re: {UAH} Is Buganda still relevant as a monarchy in the 21st
>> century?
>>
>>
>>
>> H.O.,
>>
>> Without Buganda there is no Uganda. Kindly rephrase your question so
>> as to attract DEEP answers/ thoughts.
>>
>> I feel the itch you are massaging but you are an inch off target.
>>
>> Soft and Real Power really rests in that building below. And YES we
>> can restructure the monarchy without disrespecting the existing.
>> Uganda will remain anchored on Buganda.
>>
>> George S.
>>
>>   _____
>>
>> From: Hannah Ogwapiti <[email protected]>
>> To: [email protected]
>> Sent: Tuesday, July 23, 2013 6:52 AM
>> Subject: {UAH} Is Buganda still relevant as a monarchy in the 21st
> century?
>>
>>
>>
>>
>> Is Buganda still relevant as a monarchy in the 21st century?
>>
>>
>>  Is Buganda still relevant as a monarchy in the 21st century?
>> <http://www.monitor.co.ug/image/view/-/1924230/highRes/547248/-/maxw/6
>> 00/-/14ddiet/-/Report02pix.jpg>
>>
>>
>> Bulange Mengo, the administrative seat of Buganda Kingdom. Analysts
>> say whereas the kingdom runs its own government headed by the
>> Katikkiro, it is politically impotent and has been overshadowed by the
> central government.
>> File Photo.
>>
>> In Summary
>>
>> In our series “Celebrating 20 years”, we take a look at Kabaka Ronald
>> Mutebi’s 20-year-reign and how his kingdom is far from getting over
>> its political turbulence.
>>
>> For 27 years, Buganda had no kingdom, and one of Kabaka Mutebi’s
>> palaces on the outskirts of Kampala had been turned into an army
>> barracks, while the seat of the Buganda government in Mengo served as
>> the headquarters of the Ministry of Defence.
>>
>> It all began with the infamous raid by independence leader Milton
>> Obote of King Edward Muteesa’s palace in 1966. Monarchies were
>> abolished, the king fled into exile in the United Kingdom and his son,
>> Muwenda Mutebi, grew up in a foreign country, accommodated and supported
> by friends.
>>
>> Things started to change for the better on July 31, 1993 when Buganda
>> Kingdom was restored with the coronation of Mutebi as its 36th king.
>> The ceremony at Naggalabi, the birthplace of the kingdom, remains one
>> of the momentous events in Buganda’s history.
>>
>> On August 3 (actual anniversary is July 31), Buganda will be
>> celebrating the 20th anniversary of Mutebi’s coronation with pomp and
>> ceremony. Many Baganda, the country’s largest ethnic group, will be
>> taking stock of the two decades of their Kabaka’s coronation.
>>
>> While Baganda will remember Mutebi’s colourful wedding with Sylvia
>> Nagginda in 1999 and the birth of Princess Katrina Sangalyambogo in
>> 2001 and that of Prince Richard Ssemakokiro (out of wedlock) in 2012
>> as highlights of the past 20 years, there have been sad chapters in
>> the kingdom’s history in recent years.
>>
>> The challenges
>> It has not all been smooth sailing. There have been ups and downs, and
>> there are still lingering questions about the relevance of a monarchy
>> in the 21st century.
>>
>> Baganda’s quest for federo, as the federal system is called in Uganda,
>> has so far come to nothing - and it seems highly unlikely that it will
>> bear fruit in the foreseeable future. The central government has
>> allowed Buganda to have and to do many things but it balks at ceding
>> political power to the kingdom, something that has angered many in Mengo.
>>
>> President Museveni, who played a key role in having the monarchy
>> restored, has been foremost in warning traditional and cultural
>> leaders to steer clear of politics.
>>
>> Restoring Baganda’s kingdom was a token of appreciation for the
>> support they gave him during his 1980s bush war that brought him to
>> power. But Museveni seems not ready to do more for Baganda, especially
>> where political power is concerned. Granting Baganda a federal status
>> means that other kingdoms will be pressing similar demands, and that
>> leaves a question mark on the future of a unitary system of government.
>>
>> Some Baganda politicians have proposed a federal system that leaves
>> the central government intact, but this has had only a tepid response
>> from the powers that be.
>>
>> Buganda can still use its numerical strength and economic power –
>> something it has dismally failed to do in the past – to gain state
>> power. It has a large number of well-educated and ambitious people
>> although many of them, especially the youth, do not seem to value
>> their culture and norms and even have trouble speaking and writing their
> own language.
>>
>> Despite being politically impotent, Buganda continues to run its own
>> government, headed by the prime minister who is appointed by the king.
>> The king also appoints ministers but their ministerial duties appear
>> to be largely symbolic.
>>
>> NRM Vs Buganda
>> Buganda has also continued to occupy a central but not necessarily
>> powerful position in the country’s politics, with some of the key
>> ministries and institutions being led by Baganda. Since Mr Museveni
>> came to power in 1986, three of his four vice presidents have been
>> Baganda – Samson Kisekka, Gilbert Bukenya and Edward Ssekandi.
>>
>> Out of seven ministers who have held the Finance portfolio, five have
>> been Baganda. They are Ponsiano Mulema (RIP), Joash Mayanja-Nkangi,
>> Gerald Ssendaula, Syda Bbumba and Maria Kiwanuka. The central bank has
>> also largely been headed by Baganda – Suleiman Kiggundu (RIP) and
>> Charles Nyonyintono Kikonyogo.
>>
>> Many say that appointing Baganda to key positions (the new head of the
>> army, Gen Edward Katumba Wamala, is also a Muganda) does not mean
>> Buganda wields power, but it seems that is how Mr Museveni has managed
>> to gain the electoral support of Baganda as many voters attach a great
>> deal of importance to having a minister who belongs to their tribe.
>>
>> The kingdom may have nothing to celebrate on the political front, but
>> it has been making attempts – some successful; others unsuccessful -
>> at building institutions that can generate income.
>>
>> The prize example is the Central Broadcasting Service (CBS). Launched
>> in 1996, CBS is Buganda’s flagship business venture and arguably the
>> most successful. It makes money for the kingdom and employs many
>> Baganda (and
>> non-Baganda) who would otherwise be jobless.
>>
>> In 1997, when the army vacated Lubiri which it had occupied for
>> decades, Buganda tried to expand its media empire, launching Njuba
>> Times as a bi-lingual daily. But the newspaper - like Teefe Trust Bank
>> which was launched by prominent Baganda in 1992, – was a disaster.
>> Njuba Times had trouble paying its staff and did not celebrate its first
> anniversary.
>>
>> The 2009 deadly riots that began when Mutebi was prevented by the
>> central government from visiting Kayunga, are sadly remembered by many
> Baganda.
>>
>> The violence left scores dead and also saw CBS taken off air for more
>> than a year, regaining the right to broadcast only after protracted
>> negotiations with government officials who set preconditions for the
>> radio to reopen. CBS has since refrained from discussing politically
>> sensitive matters. Its temporary closure exposed the powerlessness of the
> kingdom.
>>
>> Another sad event was the torching in 2010 of the Kasubi Tombs, which
>> accommodated the mausoleums of Buganda’s past kings. Mutebi, who
>> visited the gutted tombs along with his wife, wept. A commission of
>> inquiry the kingdom promised would investigate the cause of the fire
>> has never revealed anything.
>>
>> The writer is Al Jazeera’s online Africa Editor and is based in Doha,
>> Qatar.
>>
>> Tomorrow, we shall look at the dark moments Kabaka Mutebi has faced
>> under his reign.
>> [email protected]
>>
>>
>>
>> --
>> H.OGWAPITI
>> -----------------------------------------------------
>> "To announce that there must be no criticism of the president, or that
>> we are to stand by the president right or wrong, is not only
>> unpatriotic  and servile, but is morally treasonable to the American
> public."
>> ---Theodore Roosevelt
>>
>>
>>
>>   _____
>>
>> No virus found in this message.
>> Checked by AVG - www.avg.com
>> Version: 2012.0.2242 / Virus Database: 3204/6013 - Release Date:
>> 07/23/13
>>
>>
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