Kagame, Museveni to meet in Kampala amidst tensions

Uganda President Yoweri Museveni and Rwanda President Paul Kagame.

What you need to know:

  • The highly anticipated meeting between the two presidents comes hardly a week after President Museveni called off his trip to the Rwandan Capital, Kigali, where he was slated to attend the African Continental Free Trade Area Treaty last week.
  • Mr Kagame fought in the Bush War that brought Mr Museveni to power in 1986 and thereafter served in the Ugandan army before he and fellow Rwandan refugees launched a war that led him to power in Rwanda in 1994, with help from Uganda.
  • The decision to cancel the visit, as Daily Monitor reported on Wednesday, followed a disagreement between Mr Museveni’s advance security team and the Rwandan security officials in Kigali

Rwanda President Paul Kagame is expected to visit his Ugandan counterpart Yoweri Museveni later today, State House has said.
The highly anticipated meeting between the two presidents comes hardly a week after President Museveni called off his trip to the Rwandan Capital, Kigali, where he was slated to attend the African Continental Free Trade Area Treaty last week.

Disagreement
The decision to cancel the visit, as Daily Monitor reported on Wednesday, followed a disagreement between Mr Museveni’s advance security team and the Rwandan security officials in Kigali.
Before that, Mr Kagame had skipped the East African Heads of State Summit held in Kampala on February 22 to raise funds for health and infrastructure developments.

Asked to confirm the visit of Mr Kagame, Mr Don Wanyama, President Museveni’s senior press secretary, said: “Yes, he is coming for a one-day working visit (today).”
Mr Kagame fought in the Bush War that brought Mr Museveni to power in 1986 and thereafter served in the Ugandan army before he and fellow Rwandan refugees launched a war that led him to power in Rwanda in 1994, with help from Uganda.

But the governments and armies led by the two former allies have had frosty relations over different periods of time.
In recent months, for instance, there was a purge in the Uganda Police Force in which some senior officers and other civilians are accused of, among other things, kidnapping and aiding the repatriation of Rwandan dissidents. The policemen are on trial in the General Military Court Martial.

Accusations
The two governments have at different times accused each of other of supporting dissidents from the other country and espionage, among others.
In what has been referred to as the “Kisangani clashes” during the late 1990s, the armies of the two countries on a number of occasions clashed in the Democratic Republic of Congo, which they had attacked claiming to be pursuing rebels.