Comrades,

The article below is from the son of most beloved, Pan-Africanist Ugandan
President Idi Amin.


Amin is up there with Kwame Nkrumah!!


Ugandans will forever thank God who loved our country so much to give us
President Idi Amin.


As this brother points out our struggle is ongoing, intil we are free.


I am very proud of this Brother,  Hussein Juruga Lumumba Amin.


Mitayo Potosi

``````````````````````````````````````````


*On 2 Jul 2014 06:27, "Hussein Amin" <[email protected]
<[email protected]>> wrote:*


Open letter sent recently to the President.
-------------


Dear Mr. President,


Kindly allow me to raise the current issue of NAADS.

Since your recent announcement during the State of the Nation address that
the UPDF would get involved in the NAADS agricultural support program,
there have been many comparisons between Idi Amin and you.

The main theme of the complaints is militarization of government.

I am not sure many young people have the correct, practical knowledge to
discuss Amin.

However, it is that comparison that has prompted me to react, primarily on
government support to agriculture, and
secondly, the economics of privatization (a related issue involving
government assets,
many of which were put in place to support sectors like agriculture in the
first place).

UPC and NRM, the two main parties that have largely run this country since
Amin left, have
unashamedly blamed his government for the
appalling state of the economy that I recall discovering in shock when I
returned to Uganda in 1994.

Yet I can clearly confirm that Amin left a country that was intact in terms
of government
assets, roads, buildings, satellite television, world radio, public
transport and many other
services including those intended for farmers.

These assets included government parastatals,
cooperative unions, and major technological capacities that were literally
looted, run down
or destroyed by the "Liberators".

But let me start with a brief look at today's NAADS, the now failing
government program
for agriculture.

This program has failed for the same reasons as all other government
companies since
"liberation": Corruption.

Mr. President, the NRM followed the recommendations of the IMF and World
Bank in getting government out of industry and
business. The argument was that government didn't know how to handle
business (basically
the endemic corruption) and therefore would do better to leave all sectors
of the economy
in the hands of the private sector that would then have to fend for itself.

To put it bluntly, the poverty stricken population was told "adapt or die.
We won't help you."

This decision, Mr President, has directly affected agricultural output and
productivity as
the government subsidies have literally been reduced to seedlings.

Yet the same mismanagement continues in NAADS and many other government
programs
(i.e. Global Fund program, OPM...etc.)

The perception out there is that the introduction of the military in the
running of government programs is equivalent to taking
the country back to when Liberators took over these companies, run them
down, then sold them under the privatization program of the
90's to themselves and their friends.

You may be aware of those in your government that escaped being held
accountable for mismanagement.

To them, the privatization program must have sounded like the salvation
enabling them to
escape accountability as government parastatal companies were privatized,
and
their mismanagement, theft and plunder therefore erased.

In regards to NAADS being militarized, many arguments have been put forward
by all kinds of political analysts.

But to me, the most shocking visionary was a seemingly ordinary government
official at a
hotel reception. He had taken a break from an ongoing ministry workshop and
was discussing agriculture. He then said; "This
NAADS militarization is just Museveni saying "entebbe ewooma."

His proof was that today you seek to increasingly re-intervene in the
agricultural sector with the military.

However, we should again question sweeping privatization.

It now seems that it isn't the best
economic remedy for any country. The efforts government put in taking
control of the oil
sector is evidence that points at the necessity for state control in
sectors of strategic economic interest. Like agriculture.

If Uganda had the required logistical capacity, government could actually
have done oil
extraction, refining and transportaion by itself.

But todays government obviously can't achieve that.

Corruption is just waiting for the
opportunity to jump in. We here from parliament that it already did.

Britain had always regarded nationalization as a problem since post
independence Uganda.

But they were doing this for their self interest: continued control of
Ugandan resources and
supremacism ideologies. The companies that Apollo Milton Obote wanted to
nationalize
back then were mostly British.

So what else could anyone expect from them besides
condemning nationalization.

We can therefore assume that privatization was your way of bowing to
colonialists interests so
as to access their aid cash.

It is public knowledge that Western aid has strings attached. The elections
that Uganda has these days was a positive condition though for
western aid. Without that clause in exchange for aid, I still wonder who
would have ushered
democracy to this country.

But getting back to my initial point, if officials already exterminated
governments capacity to intervene in selected crucial market sectors, I
wonder what miracle this lone UPDF "askari" per district is going to
achieve upcountry
under NAADS.

The fellow doesn't have a single
tool, let alone ideas on modernizing agriculture.

When Amin appointed senior army officers to oversee government parastatals
as exclaimed in the comparisons being made between you
and him, his was a security matter: Preventing sabotage.

Your book 'Sowing The Mustard Seed" is one clear collection of long
standing clandestine efforts to undermine his government.

But the important point here is that the parastatals and government
entities during
Amin's time had adequate assets (offices, heavy duty harvesting equipment,
tractors, lorries, bank accounts, vehicles, telecoms, staff...etc).

They worked with cooperative unions and other organizations that also had
their assets,
funds and a local agricultural management structure where state equipment
could be
utilized by farmers grouped in districts.

It was also common knowledge that Idi Amin would immediately procure
whatever else was lacking in the field as soon as it was requested for.

In case of emergencies, officials and citizens could dial 20241, his
publicly known telephone number back then, and trust me
issues would be dealt with promptly.

His intervention in the economy simply provided strict security oversight
against saboteurs and that is how government
companies were able to do exactly what they were meant to do.

Back then, much as an essential product like sugar was problematic for
Ugandans to get
because of the economic embargo to get spare
parts for industries, the agricultural sector functioned.

Coffee, tea and cotton continued as exports. Other agricultural products
for local consumption continued being produced, and
had their immediate market.

Farms and fields were producing milk, vegetables and other staple
foodstuffs across the country.

I remember attending the launch of Kibimba Rice Scheme, a vast rice
plantation that was
being operated by Chinese government experts in order to produce and supply
rice locally,
then export any excess to neighboring countries.

But today, if truth be said, there is chaos in the emptiness of
governments' logistical
capacity to massively and decisively develop agriculture, yet we hear
officials talk
rhetorically of food security.

Just last month, a news program was presenting ongoing famine in Napak,
Karamoja. Famine is unheard of ever in Uganda.

Yet we have an entire disaster preparedness ministry and another
specifically for Karamoja.
If that isn't incompetence, what is?

Mr. President, as you rightly diagnosed, almost the entire budget of the
NAADS program goes to pay salaries of its employees.

Virtually nothing is left for actual agriculture development in terms of
equipment, storage &
processing infrastructure and agricultural inputs like seeds, pesticides
and fertilizers.

Looking at a surviving government organization like the Coffee Marketing
Board, it
is a skeleton of its former self.

The department can't achieve a tenth of its goals because of lack of
funding and the inherent absence of honest, decisive political will to
develop the sector.

What we hear in seminars and news stories has started sounding like empty
rhetoric by
so-called brilliant specialist officials.

Yet the Coffee Marketing Board has a major role that they used to proudly
perform back then as they processed, marketed and
exported quality Ugandan coffee.
They were heavily supported by government and the country was behind coffee
as our star product.

Today coffee is still a big Ugandan international export product, and
therefore still requires special preferential treatment.

Particularly with the fluctuating coffee market abroad and the sometimes
virulent coffee wilt
disease that affects farmers productivity.

Today, it is a handful of enterprising private individuals who are using
their own creativity and meagre resources to try and improve the image of
Ugandan coffee abroad.

Obviously, talking to government departments is like talking to a brick
wall. So these
individuals have focused on using foreign platforms available for
developing countries.

Their government just doesn't care.

So looking at the current NAADS militarization, it is difficult to expect
economic wonders from
the UPDF officers. The uniform alone can't help and the NRM already sold
the required
assets/technical capacity that could have allowed a robust intervention.

You rightly said that we needed more tangible agricultural assistance to
the farmers and less administrative costs.

Therefore you have correctly diagnosed the problem Mr.
President.

But your treatment is tantamount to re-injecting viruses back to the
patient.

In fact, on top of that, the country could now also brace itself for
another humongous
financial loss due to corruption.

The people are aware in advance that funds will surely vanish mysteriously
under this new
initiative. It's as sure as the rising of the sun tomorrow morning. Your
guys just can't help it being corrupt when money is in front of them.
Honestly!

The kind of fundamental change that government needs to undertake within
its ranks and its policies to meaningfully develop this country's economy
are the kind of things I can't waste time mentioning here.

Officials are known to simply pay lip service to important initiatives and
only act when it suits their ulterior self seeking purposes.

Yet there are so many brains out there and they aren't necessarily NRM.
Most are actually young, professionally motivated and apolitical when it
comes to partisan politics. They are
interested in serving government, having a family, educating their
children, building a house and getting treatment for their grandparents.

They would actually want to avoid the headaches of having to serve in
politically charged working environments.

The same can be said of the private sector.

They are good at courting government only to protect their commercial
interests. Let it be clear that they will definitely continue doing the
same with the next administration.

Ideally, they would be glad to avoid government officials altogether,
because some
are said to have become worse than pests, constantly extorting money.

Investors themselves have complained openly to you about this Mr. President.

They are tired of being turned into piggy banks where so-called
"respectable" officials
smilingly extort hard-earned cash on a regular basis while withholding
government services
that are either supposed to be free-of-charge or at a publicly fixed
nominal cost.

The private sector is the main source of income for government and should
therefore be allowed to grow without undue interference.

This reminds me Mr. President, sometime last year during a live press
conference in Kampala, you mentioned the creation of NRM companies. I
looked for details of the announcement in the press the following day
to no avail. It then dawned on me that the herd of journalists that were
present during the
briefing were completely oblivious of a historic U-turn in economic policy
that was
happening right in front of them.
Your initiative was in total contradiction with the purpose of the
privatization program.

If government couldn't make state companies successful in the 90's, how
could anyone
expect the same people to make NRM companies successful.

Even opposition parties have smaller but better maintained party
headquarters.

But let us take a closer look at how leading world economies have
strategically avoided
privatization in crucial designated sectors that remain firmly under
government control.

The EU for example, has a budget that goes almost entirely to subsidizing
their economies, particularly agriculture with
almost 80%, science & technology/research and education.

Many Western flagship companies (i.e General Motors in the US,
Peugoet/Citroen in France, Rolls Royce vehicles and aviation engines in the
UK...etc.) are either government owned,
have government as their major client, or receive heavy subsidies from
their respective
governments, particularly in times of economic recession.

Airbus industries, a world leader in civil and military aviation
construction, is another example of a common EU governments effort.

They build the state-of-the-art Euro-fighter jet that we can't even afford
to dream of.

The point is that certain industries are important and wouldn't exist
without
government leadership and direct investment.

The space industry is another example. It is globally controlled by US, EU
and Russia.

But this specific investment has enabled all the telecommunications,
digital television & radio, Geo-positioning services, research of all kinds
on populations, resources and environment via all sorts of satellites
orbiting
the earth.

And the countries involved in this sector are seeing a return on investment
as major
corporations hire their services for transporting private satellite
payloads.

Mr. President, these are momentous government initiatives from the very
people
who successfully told your government to divest from government
enterprises. Their
misleading argument was that the private sector will handle it.

When?

>From the examples above we see that markets can be directly created by
governments.

Particularly when innovation is a policy priority.

It also requires that government be bold enough to invest and provide
visible, tangible
leadership in crucial sectors of a countries economy.

In the meantime, allow me to call upon the media to objectively report back
to the people in a years time on how the UPDF/NAADS initiative is
progressing.

We wouldn't want to read headlines like "NAADS Staff Face Military Court
Martial For Treason, Sabotage, Misappropriation Of Funds". Would we?

As to the current comparisons between yourself and Idi Amin, they have
reached beyond 70's levels.

Your Uganda is now also referred to as a nepotist and sectarian gross
abuser of human
rights and involved in the killing, rape and butchering of over 6 million
congolese.

Your Uganda is being called a police state that is imprisoning, torturing
and killing political
opposition.

A British commentator recently said that the "fundamental change" you
announced in 1986
has indeed turned into "No change", which happens to be your NRM party
motto today.

The international press is now regularly talking of "Dictator Museveni and
his henchmen".
The one who gave himself the presidency for life by forcing the lifting of
term limits in the
constitution.

Soon someone will go a step further and give you the title of "Supreme
Leader".

Dont smile when you hear it. They are being sarcastic. That was the title
of your "friend"
Ghaddafi.

Sincerely,

Hussein Juruga Lumumba Amin
--
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