Open letter to President Museveni

Mr Kaheru is the coordinator, CCEDU

What you need to know:

Appeal. Your Excellency, we look forward to your timely and positive response and action on the issues that we have brought to your attention.

January 18, 2019

H.E Yoweri K. Museveni
President of Uganda
Office of the President
Kampala, UG

CCEDU LETTER TO H.E. THE PRESIDENT OF UGANDA

Your Excellency,
Congratulations on completing 2018. This letter is in line with our tradition of writing to you at the beginning of every year. Mr President, in this letter we highlight three key challenges that have afflicted elections in the recent past, and propose remedies that we believe will require urgent collective action to restore the integrity of elections in Uganda.
Monetisation of elections and corruption in electoral processes: Your Excellency, incidents of voter bribery plagued elections in 2018.

As the chairman of the NRM party, you must be concerned as we are, that your party reported various electoral malpractices, including incidents of voter bribery during the Jinja East Constituency by-election that took place on March 15, 2018.

We laud your public condemnation of voter bribery and we urge you to translate it into tangible actions, because inability to do so, sends mixed messages. For example, the Shs5b donation to 128 Sacco groups in Rukungiri on April 15, 2018, weeks prior to the Rukungiri District Woman MP by-election, was largely perceived by the public as mobilising electoral support for your party in the by-election of May 31, 2018, and therefore an attempt to influence the voters’ choice using money. In addition, previous elections have been marked by allegations of mismanagement of public resources to fund electoral campaigns.

Your Excellency, it is estimated that the total amount spent by the Electoral Commission, political parties (including NRM and FDC), and candidates (including independent candidates and those from the ‘Go Forward movement’) for the 2016 presidential and parliamentary elections was about Shs3 trillion (Shs2.4 trillion campaign spending, and about Shs500b spent by the Electoral Commission). This amounts to approximately 12.5 per cent of Uganda’s annual budget.

Your Excellency, one of the implications of using (enormous) public resources to finance personal political ambitions is to give the incumbent(s) an unfair advantage over their opponents. It also creates a cycle of corruption, in that public funds are stolen in order to finance political campaigns, and political victors loot the public coffers to accumulate wealth, recoup their illicit investment in the electoral exercise, and maintain influence over the electorate.

Your Excellency, as a first step in averting this worrying trend, we must hinge electoral politics on a value-system that denotes competency, integrity and vision. Secondly, it is time to regulate campaign financing by setting and implementing limits for campaign spending for elective positions. The Election Campaign Financing Bill, 2018, among other issues, seeks to regulate campaign financing during elections. We, therefore, call on Your Excellency to translate your public condemnation of voter bribery into action, by supporting the expeditious enactment of this law.

Integrity of the national voters register: There are still challenges that afflict the national voters register. Complaints of ‘ghost’ voters remain. Your Excellency, in order to rid the voters register of any ineligible voters, the Electoral Commission and the National Identification and Registration Authority (NIRA) need to collaborate with the wananchi, especially with regard to publicising on going citizen registration exercises, alongside articulating the importance of the registration of deaths and of persons who have left the country or denounced Ugandan citizenship.

Violence during elections: Your Excellency, a reflection on the history of elections in Uganda indicates an unabated trend of violence. Last year, Uganda witnessed hostile political campaigns in Bugiri, and more especially Arua, and this hostility reverberated across the country and beyond. Your Excellency, with specific regard to last year’s election violence, we invite you to support an impartial, transparent and conclusive inquiry into the cause of the violence, including the allegations of stoning the presidential motorcade during the Arua by-election.

With barely two years left to the 2021 elections, it is critical that as a country, we (re)-activate structured indigenous spaces (ebimeeza, barazas, kacoke madit, cokere adit) for sustained dialogues on issues of concern, shared values, and possible solutions. These indigenous public platforms can enable us to share alternative opinions, support fact-finding and healing, and enable every Ugandan to play a constructive role in building trust and confidence in our democratic and development path.

Your Excellency, we look forward to your timely and positive response and action on the issues that we have brought to your attention.

Mr Kaheru is the coordinator, CCEDU [email protected]