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Joining the queue: It’s no longer risky to try to unseat Museveni

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Prof. Bukenya has said he will take on President Museveni

Prof. Bukenya has said he will take on President Museveni (right) in the race for presidency in 2016. pHOTOs by faiswal kasirye 

By Eriasa Mukiibi Sserunjogi

Posted  Sunday, May 12  2013 at  01:00

In Summary

Vulnerable? In less than two weeks, former Vice President Gilbert Bukenya declared he would challenge his former boss within the ruling NRM and for presidency and army generals spoke against Mr Museveni fronting his son, Brig Muhoozi Kainerugaba, for the presidency.

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Is there something we do not know that makes those who know President Museveni increasingly confident that they can beat him at the polls or that he will soon vacate the national stage?
If not, what explains the clamour for his seat?

In a space of less than two weeks, former Vice President Gilbert Bukenya declared he would challenge his former boss within the ruling NRM and for the national presidency and two army generals spoke against Mr Museveni fronting his son, Brig Muhoozi Kainerugaba, for the presidency.

Brig. Kasirye Ggwanga called the Daily Monitor of his own volition to say that “a Muhoozi Project” would be “risky”. On the other hand, the Coordinator of Intelligence Services Gen. David Sejusa a.k.a. Tinyefuza called for an inquest into the possibility that officers sympathetic to “a Muhoozi Project” could have attempted to frame their counterparts who are thought to oppose it.

The generals are easier to silence, at least as far as voicing public criticism is concerned, since they are subject to the strict military code of conduct. In fact, the Chief of Defence Forces, Gen. Aronda Nyakairima, who Gen. Sejusa said was among those targeted for framing, swiftly reacted to the comments, declaring him out of order and reminding him of the army code.
A day after Gen. Aronda’s statement against Gen. Sejusa’s, we called up Brig. Ggwanga for a follow-up interview for this story but he declined to speak to us.

Prof. Bukenya also declined a follow-up interview, but for a different reason from Brig. Ggwanga’s. Prof. Bukenya said he had elaborated what he had to say in the interview Sunday Monitor ran a week ago and “I have nothing more to say at the moment.” Clearly, he was driven by political calculations while Brig. Ggwanga knows that the possibility of sanctions is real.

Why are NRM leaders silent about Bukenya’s bid?
But something is conspicuous. Since Prof. Bukenya, who famously refers to himself as the political mahogany, declared his intentions, there has been almost nothing in terms of reaction from high profile ruling party officials, a bit surprising considering how some of them reacted to Dr Kizza Besigye’s declaration that he would challenge his former boss in late 2000.
Then, senior officials in the government and the military quickly swung into action, with Prime Minister and NRM Secretary General Amama Mbabazi, who was then in charge of defence, famously saying Dr Besigye had “jumped the queue” to replace Mr Museveni.

Mr Mbabazi beat Prof. Bukenya to the party secretary general position in the party’s most recent delegates conference and he should probably consider himself higher up in the queue than Prof. Bukenya.

Why hasn’t he moved yet to remind Prof. Bukenya of the queue, or has the queue since disappeared?
Brig. Henry Tumukunde, then in charge of the military spy agency ISO, warned Dr Besigye that the guns left over from the Luweero war could be used against him. Brig. Tumukunde would later fall out with Mr Museveni too, over the move to delete the two-term limit for the presidency from the Constitution in 2005.

He was forced to resign as an army MP and later had to battle charges in the military court relating to critical statements he had made against the “Third-Term Project”.
He was convicted but let off with a warning just weeks ago. Had he been “dismissed with disgrace” from the army, which is the heaviest punishment he could suffer, he probably could have joined the opposition ranks too. Keeping him in the military will ensure that he keeps silent, at least for a while.

Other senior members of the government then, notably Mr Bidandi Ssali who has also since jumped ship to found a party of his own, said it was not the right time and Dr Besigye had rushed things.

Mr Museveni’s lieutenants should probably be making similar arguments now, especially since the President has dropped no hint yet that he could retire soon. Observers reckon the President has already switched into campaign mode, barely two years into his fourth elected five-year term.
The President’s press team has been busy in recent weeks, reporting on courtesy calls on Mr Museveni by delegations from different parts of the country at his country home in Rwakitura.
Some of the delegations have come from Acholi, where Mr Museveni has been pushing for swathes of land to be provided to industrialist Madhvani for sugarcane growing.

Recently, a picture released by the Presidential Press Unit showed a youth leader nearly collapsing under the weight of a sack of money, reportedly Shs250m, which Mr Museveni delivered to a group of partisan youths in Busoga. He went back to the area two weeks later.

Museveni unbeatable no more?
That Mr Bidandi also later fell out with Mr Museveni and stood against him in 2011, shows that even in his estimation, “the right time” for Mr Museveni to leave power is here. The only challenge is now about ability to remove him.
And removing Mr Museveni is a matter the top organs of NRM have not allowed party members to even imagine.

It is “bad manners” for anyone within the party to consider standing against “the leader of the revolution,” according to Mr Abbas Agaba, who worked in State House for some time and is now Resident District Commissioner for Serere District.
Accordingly, NRM’s Central Executive Committee (CEC) has built a reputation of refusing to approve the candidature of party members who show interest in challenging Mr Museveni for the party chair.

It has happened to Mr Felix Okot-Ogong, MP Dokolo County, Capt Ruhinda Maguru and Dr Elizabeth Nabatanzi, a former presidential aide. When NRM’s CEC sits again for the same purpose, sometime in 2015, it could be looking at people including Prof. Bukenya.

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