The rise of Dr Milton Obote

Milton Obote (2nd R) attends a function. He rose from obscurity to political prominence in 1959. Courtesy Photo

What you need to know:

Cunning politician. Apollo Milton Obote’s political calculations allowed him to rise out of oblivion to take centre stage but it was a political empire built on sand and held together by the thin strings of convenience.

One of the little-known stories, especially by Ugandans born in the last three decades, is the stunning manner in which Apollo Milton Obote, Uganda’s first post-independence prime minister, emerged out of nowhere to upstage better-placed political rivals.

Born December 28, 1925 in Akokoro village, Apac district, Obote had attended schools in Lango (Protestant Missionary School in Lira), Acholi (Gulu Junior Secondary School), Busoga (Busoga College Mwiri), and Buganda (Makerere University).

He, therefore, had a more national outlook to politics, which first came to the fore at Makerere where he was involved in a student strike, and in Kenya where he dabbled in the independence movement of that country while working petty jobs.

On his return to Uganda in 1957, Obote joined Ignatius Musaazi’s Uganda National Congress and immediately returned to his home area of Lango where he immediately got knee-deep into the local politics of the area.

Nurturing ambition
A year later, Obote returned to Kampala after being elected to the Legislative Council, and settled into a small, humble house in Naguru African Quarters. It might have been humble beginnings but the name he gave to his house – 10 Downing Street after the official residence and office of the British Prime Minister in London – clearly indicated that Obote was not lacking in ambition.

After Mengo boycotted the first direct elections in Uganda in October 1958, the African representatives to the Legislative Council came together to form the Uganda People’s Union, reflecting a growing anti-Buganda sentiment in the politics of the day.

“It was a party formed by the established leaders of the districts outside Buganda,” wrote historian Phares Mutiibwa in his book, The Buganda Factor in Uganda Politics. “[It was] a party that was seen to have been formed as a counterweight to the Mengo Establishment, whose intransigence and non-cooperation with other regions of the protectorate was becoming an irritant to many.”

Obote’s big break came in 1959 when the UNC broke up into three factions; one headed by himself, another headed by Jolly Joe Kiwanuka, and another by Ignatius Musaazi.

The three factions continued to clash for recognition as the legitimate remnant of UNC until March 1960 when Obote’s wing of the UNC merged with UPU to form the Uganda Peoples Congress under Obote’s leadership.

All the political parties up to that point had been formed in Buganda and headed by Buganda, thus Obote had become the first non-Muganda to lead a major political party.

“The rise of Obote was to turn the whole tribal structure of Uganda’s politics upside down,” George Bennett later wrote in his book, Tribalism in Politics.

Obote had learnt his politics in Nairobi during the time of the Mau Mau rebellion and had applied his lessons quickly, building up a grassroots political base upon which he was now contesting for national political glory.

“Thus Obote, the man with humble beginnings from Lango who spent some years in Kenya working as a labourer on sugarcane plantations and later as a clerk, had successfully fought his way up the slippery ladder of politics to become the leader of a major political party in the country,” writes Prof. Mutiibwa.

“One must give credit where it is due…Obote returned to Uganda in 1957 and hardly three years later, was the leader of a new political party that was to lead Uganda to independence – a remarkable achievement by all standards in the game of politics.”

But rising to the head of a major political party was the easier task. Trying to propel that party to power would provide Obote the biggest challenge – as well as the platform on which to display some remarkable political cunning and opportunism.

The behemoth of the political landscape was the Democratic Party which enjoyed support in Buganda and outside the kingdom and whose leader, Benedicto Kiwanuka, appeared a shoo-in for the top job when independence, now just around the corner, came round.

The other major political player, potentially even more important than the DP was Mengo, the seat of the Buganda Kingdom, which was caught in the middle of trying to maintain its identity and position in a rapidly changing political environment.

Buganda had already shown its muscle through the riots of 1945 and 1949 as well as the return of the Kabaka from exile. Through the Uganda National Movement, a pressure group that under Augustine Kamya coordinated boycotts and forced the expulsion of Asian traders from the Buganda countryside, Buganda had already demonstrated its political might.

It was precisely this aggression by Buganda that led to the formation of UPU and later UPC as vehicles of anti-Buganda expression.
Prof. Mutiibwa argues that it was the formation of UPC that probably forced Buganda’s ultimately unsuccessful unilateral declaration of independence with effect from December 31, 1960.

“With the benefit of hindsight, perhaps few people would blame Buganda for having had the foresight of what would befall the kingdom in an independent Uganda,” he wrote. “On the other hand, having been part of the protectorate since its inception, it became unacceptable to other regions that Buganda should be allowed to separate from the rest of the country.”

When Buganda’s succession attempt failed, it boycotted the internal elections that followed in March 1961, but DP easily won these and Benedicto Kiwanuka became the chief minister.

Kiwanuka was on the verge of becoming first prime minister of independent Uganda and the Democratic Party was on the verge of becoming the party that led the country across the threshold and out of the colonial era.

The officials at Mengo could not stand having DP or Kiwanuka in power yet, having failed to secede, they now had to find allies in the wider political field. In order to protect Buganda’s interests, they found that they had to choose between the DP, which they hated, and UPC, which had been founded mainly to oppose Buganda’s interests.

Waiting to receive them at the altar of this marriage of political convenience, in a black tuxedo and a smug, plastic smile, was Obote.
Continues Tomorrow.