What America gets for its dollars — and its culpability — in Africa



Expectant mothers lie on beds in the maternity ward of the Kalisizo General
Hospital in Kalisizo, Uganda on May 31. (Ben Curtis / Associated Press)

Helen C. Epstein

I teach and write about public health in Africa. For years, something about
Uganda stumped me.

Since 2000, health services have improved in most African countries, but
Uganda’s progress lags. Yet Uganda has a remarkable medical history. Well
before colonial times, the Baganda, Uganda’s largest tribe, could
distinguish plague from smallpox; Baganda traditional surgeons performed
caesarean sections in the 19th century, when Europeans considered them too
difficult and dangerous. During the 1950s and ’60s, Ugandans helped pioneer
treatment for childhood cancers and malnutrition. When Singapore was looking
to reform its health system in the 1960s, it sent a delegation to Uganda.

Today Uganda’s health system is a shambles, even though American taxpayers
plow hundreds of millions of dollars annually into medical projects there.
Bats, snakes and other wildlife have taken up residence in once-functioning
rural clinics. Uganda’s children die at twice the rate of those in
neighboring Rwanda and Kenya, and those who survive are among the least
likely in the world to complete elementary school. The main referral
hospital is so dysfunctional that women giving birth there are seven times
more likely to die than when Idi Amin was Uganda’s president in the 1970s.
Meanwhile, Uganda’s government spends $150 million a year flying the
president and other elites out of the country when they need medical
treatment.

It’s become clear to me that corruption, combined with the government’s
callous indifference to the plight of ordinary people, explains these
problems. But why are the U.S., the
<http://www.latimes.com/topic/business/world-bank-group-ORGOV000265-topic.ht
ml> World Bank and other donors still pouring our tax dollars into this
terrible government?

After seizing power in 1986, Ugandan President Yoweri Museveni formed a
security relationship with the U.S. that has lasted through five
administrations and seems to be holding strong under
<http://www.latimes.com/topic/politics-government/donald-trump-PEBSL000163-t
opic.html> President Trump. In exchange for billions of dollars in economic
and military aid, as well as powerful diplomatic support, Museveni has
served as our proxy warrior, sending his troops around the region to weaken
or topple other governments, particularly Islamic ones.

In return for a handful of military favors, America has tolerated not only
Museveni’s craven rule in Uganda, but also the chaos he has sown throughout
the fragile region of eastern and central Africa.

In 1990, Museveni backed the rebel invasion in Rwanda that triggered the
genocide there four years later. He wasn’t following American orders, but
the George H.W. Bush and Clinton administrations did nothing to stop him.

America has tolerated not only Museveni’s craven rule in Uganda, but also
the chaos he has sown throughout the fragile region of eastern and central
Africa.

Around the same time, Museveni obliged Washington by funneling weapons to
Sudanese rebels fighting their hard-line Islamist government. The war was
brutal, its outcome disastrous. Breakaway South Sudan is now mired in civil
war, with Museveni propping up its leader, whose army has been accused of
genocidal acts against minorities.

In 1996, Uganda with Rwanda (now led by Museveni’s allies) moved to oust
Zaire’s Mobuto Sese Seko, installing a new dictator and precipitating two
wars that killed millions. The Clinton administration not only greenlighted
this march of folly, it also supplied equipment and training to brutal
invading commandos. It turns out Mobutu had been making overtures to the
Islamists in Sudan, and the U.S. likely wanted to ensure Zaire’s (renamed
Congo in 1997) wealth of minerals — diamonds, gold, uranium, cobalt and
coltan used to make cellphones — wouldn’t fall into the wrong hands.

After the disastrous 2006 U.S.-Ethiopian invasion of Somalia, Museveni alone
among African leaders sent peacekeepers to the ravaged nation. Instead of
wiping out Islamic militants, the U.S. had undermined a moderate government
and radicalized the youth militia Al Shabab, which went on to join the Al
Qaeda network. America still relies on Ugandan troops to fight Shabab
terrorists, which explains why we turn a blind eye to Museveni’s abuses to
this day.

In 2013, I met a remarkable Ugandan named Lawrence Kiwanuka Nsereko, who now
lives near where I teach in upstate New York. Nsereko has been fighting to
bring democracy to his country since he was 14 years old. In Uganda, he was
a child soldier, a newspaperman and a political candidate. He’s seen his
newspaper’s office ransacked, his party headquarters torched, his friends
and colleagues killed. He was arrested, tortured and nearly assassinated.

Nsereko helped answer my question about Uganda and the donors, and he also
helped me see that Ugandans cannot free themselves from Museveni’s
corruption and warmongering on their own.

They’ve tried mightily: Just last month, exasperated Ugandans launched a
campaign to thwart Museveni’s latest plan to extend his 31-year grip on
power. Called Togikwatako, meaning “Don’t dare touch it!” (a well-known
parental warning in the vernacular), it refers to a clause in Uganda’s
Constitution limiting the age of the president to 75. Museveni claims to be
73, and he has no intention of leaving office in two years. After one of his
henchmen presented a bill in Uganda’s Parliament to scrap the age limit,
Togikwatako demonstrations erupted across the country. Security forces
responded with bullets, batons, tear gas and whips fashioned from the strips
of car tires.

Courageous opposition members of parliament, and even members of Museveni’s
party, tried to filibuster the debate on the age-limit amendment by singing
the national anthem over and over. Eventually a chair-throwing brawl broke
out, and Museveni’s plainclothes hit squad forcibly arrested nearly 30
Togikwatako MPs. Two of Lawrence’s friends were injured: Kampala Mayor Erias
Lukwago, whose testicles were crushed by police as they arrested him, and
lawmaker Betty Nambooze, now on crutches.

To many Americans, Africa’s conflagrations must seem like distant bonfires
having nothing to do with us. When we care at all, we throw up our hands at
“ethnic conflicts” and send humanitarian aid. But Nsereko knows — and now so
do I —that we can do far more because our government is propping up the
architect of much of the pandemonium.

“Museveni is like a giant tree that kills everything in its shadow,” he told
me. “Get rid of it, and good things will begin to grow.”

As we examine America’s commitment to democracy and human rights, its
military actions, and the racism that has haunted it since its founding, we
should also reckon with our treatment of Africa. The lives of its people
matter too.

Helen C. Epstein’s latest book is “Another Fine Mess: America, Uganda and
the War on Terror.”

 

EM

On the 49th Parallel          

                 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" 

 

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