Thought & Ideas

Corruption a national disease

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A police officer’s wife demonstrates in Kampala over power disconnection and delayed salaries for government workers.

A police officer’s wife demonstrates in Kampala over power disconnection and delayed salaries for government workers. The delays were allegedly due to efforts to remove ghosts from the national payroll . Photo by Abubaker Lubowa 

By Timothy Kalyegira

Posted  Sunday, November 18  2012 at  02:00

In Summary

Next target. When all the money in the Bank of Uganda, in the President’s Office, the Prime Minister’s Office, the army, police and the Ministry of Finance has all been stolen, where else is there to turn for further money?

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Usually in the Third World countries, demonstrations, when they are held at all, tend to focus on human rights violations, dictatorship and rigged elections.

This says something about the level Uganda has sunk to; as demonstrations are now being held to speak out against corruption.

This is what happened last week when a number of civic groups, political parties and freelance activists staged a series of abortive demonstrations against corruption.

The Uganda Police, whose own wives had staged a similar demonstration a week earlier against the same corruption and horrible living conditions, blocked these civic groups.

The four stages of corruption
The October 1, issue of the Jehovah’s Witness magazine, The Watchtower, had a cover story, “Corruption: Will it ever end?”, reflecting the widespread, international reach of this problem.
It is increasingly becoming difficult to survive as an honest person in this world.

At stage one, when it is just starting to become a problem, corruption is a shameful moral problem that we read about and shake our heads in disgust. But at that point we don’t yet directly feel it. It is something we read about in newspapers and hear on the radio. This where Uganda was, from 1989 to about 1996.

The Uganda Confidential newsletter became the first publication in the country’s history (founded in 1990) to report exclusively about corruption. The public started to note and complain that there were too many westerners in prominent government offices. But at that stage, it remained a matter for debate on radio and in the newspapers.

But as time goes on and corruption takes deeper root in society, at stage two it starts to become an economic, business problem. It adds huge costs to business operations.

It greatly disadvantages those who play by the rules but have to compete in an open market alongside those who evade taxes or place phone calls to people “above” and get Bank of Uganda to bail them out.

Second stage
This second stage is what Uganda entered between 1996 and 2003. Ordinary people started to feel and complain in increasing numbers about how difficult it was to get a job, contract, tender or licence if one did not know somebody.

Scholarships meant for ordinary Ugandans were now directly held and distributed by State House. Helicopters that did not work and army uniforms that did not fit became national news. A World War II radar to be used at Entebbe airforce base was bought. It did not work, of course.

Valley dams were built that had no water. Uganda Commercial Bank, the largest in the country and the Uganda Grain Millers, PrintPak, and others, were all sold in very dubious circumstances.

Uganda entered the league of Kenya and Nigeria, the league of unheard-of levels of corruption. Then the country entered stage three - after 2003 - the stage where those in power or those perpetuating the corruption no longer feel a sense of shame.

First in 2003, President Museveni flew his daughter, Natasha, to Germany on the presidential jet (not his personal jet) to give birth to her first child.

This scandal hit Ugandans badly, but it was just the beginning. Two years later, senior government officials had the guts to steal money from the UN’s Global Fund for Malaria, Tuberculosis and Aids, meant for ordinary Ugandans.

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