When Officials Hid From Museveni At Cabinet Retreat

By Yasiin Mugerwa

Posted  Sunday, March 27 2016 at 02:00

Museveni on Tuesday did what a “Magufuli” would do to negligent ministers
and technocrats, in a remorseless purge of corruption, laziness and laxity
in public service- a critical issue that has stalled service delivery and
plagued his government.
A tough-taking Museveni fanned tension at a Cabinet retreat in Kampala when
he demanded accountability from the ministers, permanent secretaries,
Resident District Commissioners (RDCs) and Chief Administrative Officers
(CAOs).
Some officials, including ministers, stammered through answers on lack of
monitoring yet others struggled to pass the blame to other departments as
the Museveni sought “convincing explanation” for the continued poor service
delivery, poverty, high electricity prices and corruption, particularly in
government departments.
Trouble started after Prof Tarsis Kabwegyere, the minister of General
Duties, gave the highlights of a two-day Cabinet retreat, detailing
inaction and “persistent poor performance” on the part of the various
sectors of the economy.
Not inspected
For instance, the Cabinet retreat observed that 95 per cent of schools are
not inspected, low staffing levels in local governments, encroachment and
degradation of wetlands, illegal land evictions in the country, high
maternal mortality rate, congestion in prisons and theft of government
drugs.
Mr Museveni said he makes surprise visits to barracks without necessarily
seeking the permission of the Chief of Defence Forces and wondered why
ministries and other government agencies were reluctant to monitor service
delivery in the country.
“You cannot delegate corruption, everything you delegate you are
responsible. The centre must check on local governments,” Mr Museveni said.
He wondered why he spent few hours with the people during the
just-concluded 2016 presidential campaigns and effectively picked the
issues affecting the people particularly in the countryside, yet the RDCs,
the CAOs, the permanent secretaries and ministers are oblivious.
“When you go upcountry, you find a lot of unrealistic expectations yet we
have RDCs and CAOs. They don’t communicate what is unrealistic, they just
keep quiet,” Mr Museveni complained, before he asked: “Do we have RDCs
here? Can one of them stand up and I see how they look like?”
He said in the past, RDCs were special district administrators and that
over the years, they have become “ordinary” because they don’t talk, they
don’t inspect government programmes, “yet they should be informers to the
public guided by the command centres- the OPM [Office of the Prime
Minister] and presidency”.
Addressing the dangers of “poverty conservation project,” Mr Museveni noted
that it’s unacceptable to have 68 per cent of homesteads under subsistence
farming.
“Somebody harvests either a sugar cane or an egg and goes to church to
thank God after one year and they do this very happily. They think they are
already in heaven yet they are busy conserving poverty,” Mr Museveni said.
As a solution to poverty conservation, Mr Museveni said, he had wanted to
introduce a new law on “commercial farming and ending land fragmentation”
but he dropped the idea because he never wanted to cause controversy and
resorted to sensitisation of the people on the dangers of subsistence
farming and dividing land.
On lack of supervision, Mr. Museveni changed tone, toughened a bit and
called officials one-by-one in front to explain their inability to monitor
government programmes. He started with the health docket, observing that
“the ministry is not working”.
“Where is the director general of health services? Dr Ruth Aceng where is
she?” There was silence in the room before he went on: “They have boycotted
inspection, everywhere people are complaining. The Medicines and Health
Service Delivery Monitoring Unit at State House arrests people and they are
released by courts. The courts even order that the criminals are
compensated for unlawful arrest.”
“That we should not inconvenience thieves who steal government drugs! And
this is happening in the Republic of Uganda. Uganda is God-fearing country
with 96 per cent either Christians or Muslims but can easily become a Sodom
and Gomorrah if we continue like this.”
Since Dr Aceng was not present, Prime Minister Ruhakana Rugunda asked the
Health permanent secretary (PS), Dr Asuman Lukwago, to explain what is
going on. The PS attempted to blame ineffective supervision and delegation
of ministry roles to local governments but the President said: “Don’t tell
me about delegation, why can’t you arrest the suspects and those who have
failed to supervise [the drugs]?”
On education, the President said district education officers have refused
to inspect schools yet they are paid a salary to do the job.
“You find children under mango trees playing because there are no teachers.
Children from private schools perform well because schools are inspected.
Our inspectors are paid but they are a problem,” Mr Museveni said.
“You said it’s a retreat, is the PS for Education here? Where is Dr Nassali
Lukwago? Okay [Jessica] Alupo come and explain… and the rats in Kyenjojo
ate a whole school. Have you heard about it?”
Mr Museveni also thought to know whether ministry of Education officials
had colluded with Dr Kizza Besigye to stay home.
Demanding answers
The minister explained: “As a ministry, we are part of the retreat, we were
invited and my PS is around and the head of planning even today [Tuesday]
morning saw them.”
But he asked: “Why are they not inspecting schools?” Ms Alupo said, the
ministry allocates resources to local governments for inspection, but “the
question we have always asked is why the money we sent is not used”.
Then Mr Museveni asked: “But who is the national quality controller of
education, it can’t be the local government. Do you still have anything
useful to say?”
Alupo kept quiet and responded: “We have taken your guidance and we are
going to improve.”
In his parting shot, Museveni said: “I am glad the PM invited me so that I
can give you limited quarrel because of some actors. Please ensure
corrective measures to eliminate the bottlenecks that jeopardise progress.
With those few quarrels I officially close the retreat.”

monitor.co.ug/Magazines/PeoplePower/When-government-officials-hid-from-Museveni-at-C/-/689844/3134712/-/f8p09pz/-/index.html
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