From: oryema johnson [mailto:[email protected]] 
Sent: Monday, September 29, 2014 11:17 AM
To: Herrn Edward Mulindwa
Subject: Re: {UAH} OJ THIS IS WHY I ABANDONED AFRICA, WE ARE STILL SLAVES SIR

 

Muna Luweero munange EM,

 

Thank you for the note and for sending me Eddie's positive remarks on Uganda 
following his recent visit there. On a personal level, I am well and kicking. 
Been working on a book that will hit the book shelves by end of this year as 
well as continuing my telehealth endeavors. In addition, I have been working on 
a scientific invention that would serve to transfer fluids like water, natural 
gas, oil or other gases more efficiently using a natural laminar flow, without 
friction produced on the inside of the pipeline. Patents are pending both in 
the USA and Canada.

 

On Eddie's positive remarks on Uganda, it is not a surprise, after all, he is 
not the first nor the last. If a nation's level of development, success and 
prosperity is to be determined by beautiful flower gardens on the road side, 
his own country of Zimbabwe, would have entered the Guinness world book of 
records long time ago. In peaceful Mount Pleasant the home of the University of 
Zimbabwe, there are numerous lovely and most beautiful flower gardens, and yet 
Zimbabwe is in an economic mess with no currency of its own. Today, one can 
walk into Harare and buy anything using Indian Rupees, Swedish Krona or Chinese 
Yuan. If our late Bob Astles visited Harare and Victoria Falls,he would have 
the same impression, Zimbabwe is developing at a supersonic speed, there are 
flower gardens everywhere.

 

As you correctly point out, when a foreigner makes decision on your own 
domestic affairs, your fate lies in their hand and they will dress you in khaki 
shorts in winter and give you ice cream on the coldest day of the winter. They 
say beggars have no choice.

 

My conclusion is that Africa demanded for and got independence before its time. 
Jaramogi Oginga Odinga makes this case in his book "Not Yet Uhuru". Prof. Ali 
Mazrui in his BBC series said "Things are not working in Africa" The compact 
between Africa and development especially in the 21st Century is not there. 
Letta Mbulu, South African Jazz Singer from Soweto says the same thing 
"Amakhamandela"-Not Yet Uhuru in her Zulu language.

 

Will Africa ever find its way out of the cave? Frankly, I do not know. For that 
reason, I no longer engage actively in discussing African politics but sit in 
the public stadium watching Africans play their political football without 
making any scores. Plus, they play against each other  "mbabazi Vs Museveni" in 
our Lugogo stadium.

 

Have a great  day my friend. The fun days of "okukwana abawala mulusuku e 
Luweero" are over. A combination of age and geographical divide makes it even a 
more challenging task..it is a like a 70 year old man (muzeyi) chasing a 
gazelle in Kiwoko or Katikamu" Eddie Cross is looking for a new home in Uganda. 
Wish him lack!!

 

OJ

 

On Sunday, September 28, 2014 8:42 PM, Herrn Edward Mulindwa <[email protected] 
<mailto:[email protected]> > wrote:

 

Omukulu OJ

 

Long time no see, Look when I get writings that make my head spin I sometimes 
love to refer them to you. In my arguments with my friends like Edward Pojim I 
have stated that Africa’s problem is not poor leadership but the decisions made 
on our continent are made by foreigners. Whether we elect or we don’t elect 
does not matter for the results are already set up in our absence. And those 
decisions really matter and end up affecting all of us. 

 

Due to the weakness of Robert Mugabe, when he went after the land 
redistribution, he left the whites to live in Zimbabwe. Among those that he 
left is Eddie Cross who is an MP of the opposition under Tsivangirai. Yes he is 
in opposition of Mugabe’s government although they are a part of the 
government.  The MP trolled into Uganda few days ago, and I need all of us to 
take a breath, let us not be hyped but read his report on Uganda and what he 
saw. Friends it does not matter what we say in forums it does not matter what 
we decide, what this man states affects you and me way more than what your vote 
states. And why? Because right now you all as Ugandans are fucked, the report 
he is going to write about Uganda to the world bank, to IMF to the UN to you 
name it will directly affect you. And this is how great the MP saw Uganda he is 
about to immigrate to the Pearl Of Africa. What we need in our continent is not 
yet good leadership but stopping whites to decide our future. OJ be very 
worried on how MP Eddie Cross sells the Museveni achievements in our country. 
Do you also realize that he went to Uganda and Rwanda and he refused to reach 
DRC where 8 million people have died to finance that entire cabal he was in? 
Imagine if 8 million whites had died, his writing would have changed. And that 
is the value whites put into blacks. May President Iddi Amin rest in peace 
indeed.

 

OJ this man’s writing is the only reason I need Museveni out of power for every 
crappy thing he has done in Uganda is to liberate whites, and so here we are.

EM

On the 49th Parallel 

Hope for Africa

 Living in a near failed State like Zimbabwe and watching the news about the 
rest of Africa, it’s easy to be pessimistic about the continent. But I have 
recently spent time in Namibia, Kenya and Uganda. Last week I was on a 
Parliamentary trip to Kampala, the Capital of Uganda, which lasted 5 days. I 
must say that we were impressed with Kampala – it’s a City of 5 million people, 
about 80 kilometers across, a major City by any standard. Uganda has had its 
share of the “African” disease – bad government, corruption and human and legal 
rights abuse; the expulsion of the Asian business community and the economic 
collapse that followed, but what we found was unexpected.

The City is clean – I seldom saw any litter, certainly none in the City center, 
no pot holes and the gardens immaculate – I have always judged communities by 
their gardens as a community that plants trees and flowers and mows the lawn, 
is a stable and progressive community. On a day trip to Jinga we passed 5 
nurseries selling trees and shrubs. The country does not experience winter and 
gets two wet seasons a year so it was green and vibrant. Plant anything and it 
grows. Our human contacts were no less impressive, Ugandans are confident in 
their skins, open and friendly. I never felt any sense of insecurity even 
though there was a security clamp down at the time due to some intelligence 
about a threat. Every meeting we attended was on time and well organized, if 
our driver said he would be at the hotel to pick us up at 10, he was there with 
a protocol officer who  could not have been more helpful and facilitating.

In Parliament we observed the Committees at work; we watched a sitting of the 
House and heard some debate. It is clear that Parliament is a strong, 
independent institution and clearly takes its role as the watchdog of the 
people very seriously. We heard senior officials from the Prime Minister’s 
Office being grilled over unauthorized expenditure – a tough no hold barred 
session. We watched another committee grill the senior officers from a Rural 
Council over a debt of $40 000 that had not been accounted for – they were 
given a week to produce the culprits and the truth or face serious 
consequences. It was a real privilege to be able to see an administration in 
Africa working so well and to recognize that this was really Uganda at work – 
not some foreign consultants or expatriates, but the real thing, all home grown 
and indigenous. The staff and Members of Parliament that we met were charming 
and confident and well aware of the crucial role they were playing in their 
society. I was deeply encouraged and we learned a great deal from our 
counterparts about how we might improve our own performance at home in Zimbabwe.

 For those of us who have made Africa our home of choice, these examples of a 
functional society that is self-confident and progressive, are important 
because we all need hope while we struggle with the present and the past. 
Africa is on the move. This year the continental economy will grow faster than 
any other, we are at last making some inroads to the poverty of our people and 
our institutions are slowly growing in maturity and strength. Of course there 
are problems and we saw those – the massive informal sector, run down railways 
system, large areas of low grade housing and clear evidence of insecurity of 
tenure. The school system is mixed – half private and half State and the 
standards vary a great deal. You really need to be able to afford private 
education to equip your children with a decent education. Health care is also 
very disparate – the poor get a low standard of care while the rich can get 
what they want. The economy is dominated by that of Kenya but regional 
institutions seem to be working better than here in southern Africa. The 
problem of the Big Man persists, Mr. Museveni has been in power for many 
decades and while we were there he fired his Prime Minister for what seemed to 
us to be very flimsy reasons – the real reason probably being that he was 
clearly intending to challenge the President in 2016. Power is highly 
centralized but the State works and there is quite a lot of new investment 
which suggests that policies are reasonably investor friendly. 

 Next door is Rwanda where once a week the State President goes onto the street 
to collect litter, where millions of peasant farmers have been given secure 
legal title to their land and are now owners, not occupiers. I looked at the 
departure board in Nairobi airport and saw 12 flights to Kigali. The economy 
there is booming and there is a new sense of purpose and enterprise. This was 
the country that just a few years ago was witnessing the murder by machete of 
80 000 people a day for months. It is all about leadership. When I flew from 
Nairobi to Harare three weeks ago there were just 12 passengers on my flight. 
On the ground we were the only flight being processed, on the way into town we 
used a short road project that was first given to a local firm for execution at 
a cost of $80 million for 17 kilometers. When they failed to fulfill their 
contract it was taken over by the State agency. There was no need for the new 
road; the old one was quite adequate but our President felt that he wanted a 
new road to showcase visitors – purely an ego issue.

 Our economy is in dire straits, accompanied by company closures and declining 
revenues to the State, only six per cent of our population is working in a 
formal job, half of them for the government. Our present fiscal situation is 
totally unsustainable yet our President insisted on travelling to New York to 
strut on the world stage and took over 100 people with him at a cost of 
millions. After 34 years there is no understanding of just what is important 
and what is counterproductive. It’s easy to be discouraged when you face a 
situation like that and many in Zimbabwe are desperate about the situation they 
find themselves in right now. Uganda and Rwanda show us that these things pass, 
that around us Africa is growing up and coming to terms with its past and 
dealing with the present very well. Every Zimbabwean needs to visit these 
places, if only to see that there is life after all in Africa and eventually we 
will also win through.

 But winning is not going to be done by foreigners – that is our job and only 
Zimbabweans can liberate themselves and find a future.

 Eddie Cross

29th September 2014    

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

 

-- 
UAH forum is devoted to matters of interest to Ugandans. Individuals are 
responsible for whatever they post on this forum.To unsubscribe from this 
group, send email to: [email protected] 
<mailto:[email protected]>  or Abbey Semuwemba at: 
[email protected] <mailto:[email protected]> .

 

_______________________________________________
Ugandanet mailing list
[email protected]
http://kym.net/mailman/listinfo/ugandanet

UGANDANET is generously hosted by INFOCOM http://www.infocom.co.ug/

All Archives can be found at http://www.mail-archive.com/[email protected]/

The above comments and data are owned by whoever posted them (including 
attachments if any). The List's Host is not responsible for them in any way.
---------------------------------------

Reply via email to