Thursday, December 6, 2018

Uganda officials inflated refugee numbers to con UK government

When United Nations chief Antonio Guterres begged the world to help Uganda deal with ‘the biggest refugee exodus in Africa since the Rwandan genocide’, Britain led the way with a big injection of foreign aid.
Ministers offered an extra £40 million on top of the £111 million already spent in the East African country last year, and billions given to UN and European agencies.
A Daily Mail investigation has discovered that at least four separate investigations have been launched into fears greedy officials in the prime minister’s office distorted and inflated refugee figures to exploit the situation and fleece foreign aid budgets.
The UN says there are 1.46 million refugees in Uganda from conflicts in neighbouring nations.

But a spot check on 26,000 recorded refugees confirmed only 7,000, with as many as 19,000 thought to be ‘ghost’ registrations.
“There’s certainly a scam going on,’ said a UK official. “We are just not sure how big a scam.
Uganda is rightly praised for its friendly stance to refugees, offering them land in settlements rather than forcing them into grim camps. This has led to enthusiastic support from major donors such as Britain.
‘Thanks to UK aid, refugees reaching Uganda are receiving shelter, food, medical care, a measure of safety and the hope for a future,’ said former Dfid secretary Priti Patel on a visit last summer to the sprawling Bidibidi settlement.
This area of northern Uganda is claimed as the world’s biggest refugee encampment, housing about 270,000 people, mostly fleeing war in South Sudan.
Last year UN agencies and major charities spent £66 million of UK taxpayer cash on the humanitarian crisis in Uganda, largely through bodies such as the World Food Programme (WFP) and refugee agency UNHCR.

The response was co-ordinated by Uganda’s OPM, despite Britain and other Western donors stopping direct support in 2012 after millions of pounds were siphoned from that department into private accounts.
Now it is suspected that some officials saw refugees as a means to make money by stealing food supplies, that they took kickbacks for lucrative contracts and traded UN registrations for sex or cash.
‘We believe the corruption has been going on a long time,’ said one UN source. Another senior UN official said the key question was whether theft was ‘institutional or by individuals’.
Cooked figures?
Doubts over refugee data arose seven months ago following complaints involving food distribution in a settlement near Rwanda.
The WFP carried out a spot check on 26,000 registered refugees, and found only 7,000 people turning up for help. The shock revelation led to the dismissal of a big US charity running the programme.
Filippo Grandi, the head of UNHCR, flew in to hold crisis meetings with UN and donor teams.
Days later, the organisation’s Uganda representative wrote to the Ugandan government to highlight concerns.
These included ‘incidences of gross mismanagement, fraud and corruption in Uganda refugee operations’, according to a letter sent to the Prime Minister’s office by Hilary Onek, Minister for Relief, Disaster Preparedness and Refugees.
The letter, seen by this newspaper, alleged ‘numerous thefts of relief items and misapplication of government land for themselves’ by OPM officials, along with allegations of ‘trafficking minor girls and women married to men not of their choice’.
Britain suspended funding for four days, then began to ‘unsuspend’ donations after accepting new safeguards.
UN sources believe significant relief supplies ended up on the black market and dodgy contracts were doled out.
‘In one zone alone I know of five operating partners that are NGOs [non-governmental organisations] linked to OPM people,’ said a Western contractor.
Markets in settlement areas and nearby towns openly display relief items on sale still in WFP packaging.
These include maize, beans and child nutrition packs, along with solar-charging devices and even entire boxes of cutlery.
Some are small quantities sold by refugees to buy food to vary their dreary diet. But traders admitted they buy much bigger supplies from corrupt state officials.
Peter, a South Sudanese man selling food inside Bidibidi, told me he travelled to a town 60 miles away and bought 50 sacks of WFP maize at a time.
These were piled up behind him in a small but well-stocked storeroom. ‘I buy from the host community,’ he said. ‘There is much of this for sale.’
Now urgent attempts are being made to verify refugee numbers, with insiders saying the Ugandan statistics are distorted by systematic abuse.
Thousands have been removed from lists – up to 40 per cent in some areas, say sources – and others added. ‘They are desperate to get the number over one million,’ said a refugee adviser.
Western advisers and experts said everyone knew the numbers were unreliable. ‘It was an open secret,’ said a contractor. ‘It was raised repeatedly in meetings.’
One major international charity carried out its own checks early last year in Bidibidi and found substantial inflation of figures.
‘It became clear the numbers in camps were much lower than the authorities and UNHCR were estimating,’ said a source.
But Robert Baryamwesiga, OPM commandant at Bidibidi, said: ‘It’s not like counting cattle.
‘We are dealing with human beings who move around, return home and progress.’
It is understood at least five OPM officials, including one senior official, have been suspended.
Uganda’s government also claims to be looking into ‘connivance’ with international aid agency staff.
Collusion
‘There is some collusion between individuals in the UN system, the implementing agencies and individuals in the government agency responsible,’ said Obiga Kania, state minister of internal affairs whose constituency is near Bidibidi.
‘The offer of an open refugee policy is genuine but we need to be clean.
‘There is obviously inflation in numbers. Another problem is the awarding of contracts because people get favours. Sometimes they do no work at all.’
I saw one charge sheet alleging that four mid-ranking OPM officials transferred more than £71,000 into their bank accounts over a single three-month period.
Two were also accused of making false expenses claims over the same time worth £99,000.
Yet one of the men, a camp manager, claims he is the fall guy after his boss told him to hand back funds raised in a special budget to help refugees, then took the cash.
This was possible, he says, since foreign aid arrived to pay for refugees.
Refugees told me officials demanded up to £150 for registration forms entitling settlement and food aid.
Some female refugees in Uganda also say sexual abuse is rife, echoing claims involving the UN and major charities such as Oxfam in other relief zones.
I spoke to three women from Democratic Republic of Congo and one from Burundi who told horrifying tales of assault by police officers, charity staff and officials.
One teenager said she fled Bukavu in DRC aged 11 after seeing her father shot and mother stabbed to death by soldiers.
‘When I went to the police to register, an officer said I must sleep with him,’ said Winnie. ‘I did not really understand since I was so young.’
Later, she said, she was forced to sleep with a worker from a local charity and became pregnant. ‘I’m so desperate,’ she said.
There have been claims of South Sudanese women being trafficked from refugee camps back over the border for sale to combatants.
The scandal should not surprise Dfid since its own internal four-year strategy plan for Uganda, seen by this paper, warns about such theft.
‘Corruption is a major obstacle to development in Uganda,’ it reported. ‘A failure to sanction the corrupt has led to a perception of impunity that has weakened public sector effectiveness.’
The legacy of donor complacency leaves refugees as victims twice over: first of chaos and carnage in a war zone, then of dismal failures in a place supposed to offer sanctuary.
Pauline Anek is the sort of person our aid policies are meant to assist – a mother of five children who fled conflict and now relies on relief efforts to survive in Bidibidi.
When we meet, Anek, 30, is preparing pumpkin leaves to cook with a few beans. Her son Ivan stands beside her chair, staring intently at the pitiful ingredients for his next meal.
The distended belly on another of her five children indicated signs of malnutrition.
Anek dragged from her hut a small bag of beans, a bigger one of maize and a container of cooking oil, all supplied by United Nations relief agencies with help from British taxpayers.
‘This food does not last the whole month. After 15 days it is finished and we have nothing for two weeks,’ she says.
Even these pathetic portions – designed as the minimum needed for human sustenance – may be cut soon by the WFP. Meanwhile there has been a cholera outbreak in the settlement areas.
Uganda also highlights wider issues with aid. Britain pumps cash into a corrupt and authoritarian regime, run by a security-obsessed 73-year-old ruler who has been in power for 32 years and recently bribed MPs to scrap the presidential age limit of 75.
Foreign aid provides almost two and a half times as much as tax to state coffers. Yet Uganda’s health budget was cut this year, while Dfid’s leaked internal report admits per capita education spending ‘has fallen in recent years.’
A DFID spokeswoman insisted it had zero tolerance for theft or sexual exploitation and added that UK aid was saving lives and supporting refugees to become self-reliant and boost the economy.
Adopted from The Daily Mail, UK

Railway officials take 750Bn in bribes

Angry Museveni renegotiates contract, gets bribes list
Kampala, Uganda | HAGGAI MATSIKO | President Yoweri Museveni has been told, according to insiders, a Chinese contractor paid officials and commission agents a whooping $ 200 million (approx.750bn) in order to secure a contract to construct the Standard Gauge Railway (SGR).
Insiders say the contractor in question, China Harbour Engineering Company (CHEC), has made these revelations to President Museveni and even provided a list of officials to whom the payments were made, well-placed sources have told The Independent.
Insiders say Museveni is now finally ready for CHEC to go on with the SGR project and a deal was expected to be signed at the Forum on China-Africa Cooperation (FOCAC) in Beijing, China, in September. This green light is expected to unlock funds from China’s Exim Bank for construction to start.

The Standard Gauge Railway deal worth about $2 billion has since 2012 pitted several Ugandan officials and Chinese companies against each other, and attracted court cases and multiple investigations.
In the past the jostling resolved around which of the competing Chinese firms would bag the deal because, although the government had entered an agreement over the deal with China Civil Engineering Construction Corporation (CCECC), Museveni offered the deal to CHEC.
The President’s latest intervention was partly driven by a report on the SGR contractor procurement by a committee led by Badru Kiggundu, the engineer who previously headed the Electoral Commission. Kiggundu’s committee report which was handed to Museveni in May indicates that the SGR Engineering, Procurement, and Construction (EPC) contract with CHEC is inflated by over $600m.
Armed with this information, Museveni set about getting the Chinese to reduce the contract price. Well-placed sources say the president held several meetings with CHEC officials at his country home in Rwakitura, others at State House Entebbe, and others at State House Nakasero.
To unlock the gridlock, the Chinese also brought in top diplomats from China and in Uganda. In June, for instance, a top leader of the ruling Communist Party of China (CPC), Wang Yang, visited Kampala and engaged the president on SGR matter.
The Chinese Ambassador to Uganda, Zheng Zhuqiang, has also severally engaged President Museveni. Despite these efforts and more, Museveni maintained his stance. Even when the Chinese offered to reduce the price by some $ 50 million at a June 21 meeting, the President still declined and pressed the officials for more.
Chinese confess
The Chinese were later informed that President Museveni was considering cancelling the contract if they did not reduce the price. That is when, in the final two definitive meetings, the Chinese officials told Museveni that part of the reason they could not reduce the contract price was because they had already paid hefty commissions to the tune of $ 200 million.
The President immediately demanded to know to whom this money had been paid to. With stakes so high, insiders say, the Chinese offered to reduce by $ 120 million and provided a list of names they had paid the $ 200 million. Having learnt of the hefty bribes CHEC had paid to Uganda officials, President Museveni on Aug.16, advised Chinese officials never to pay bribes.
“On corruption, I urge investors especially you the Chinese, to report to your ambassador any Ugandan government official asking for bribes. The ambassador will report to me and people will go to jail,” the president said in a Tweet.
The president was that day officiating at the 2nd Uganda-China Economic Investment and Trade Co-operation Forum at Hotel Africana in Kampala. Insiders say the President has also blacklisted several individuals he has previously relied on during the process to procure the SGR contractor.

Burundi: Letter from H.E. President Pierre Nkurunziza to H.E. President Yoweri Kaguta Museveni (04.12.2018)








UGANDA: CAN MUSEVENI’S UNCOORDINATED SECURITY MACHINERY CONTAIN MASS PROTESTS?

Originally Posted by: http://perilofafrica.com/

Since 2011 during the opposition Walk to Work protests in Kampala and the subsequent protests like the Defiance, Kogikwatako and now the Tubalemese, Museveni’s security machinery has actively foiled such efforts. The different security agencies like the army, the police, the intelligence services, the SFC, and the various paramilitary groups like the Boda Boda 2010, Crime Preventers and others have always effectively coordinated to brutally contain opposition led protests.
However, recent events concerning rivalry over supremacy and control of resources have clearly demonstrated a visible rapture in the coordination efficiency of these security agencies. The police which is the lead agency in such situations is being undermined by the lead intelligence agencies (ISO and CMI). Its operational efficiency must be at its lowest and its auxiliary forces in the form of Boda Boda 2010, Crime Preventers and others are in disarray. The latest is that the police chief has threatened to prosecute his officers who are sharing information with the other security agencies without his express permission. He is not personally on talking terms with his counterparts. The situation implies that there is no institutional coordination of both intelligence and field operations.

Ordinarily it would look as if in the event of an organised opposition protest, the police being the lead agency would not effectively respond. This would leave the army to take the lead in dealing with the situation though with devastating consequences. Obviously, the police would wish to see the army failing to contain the situation or at best mismanaging it.
Of course, in the event of a resurgence of opposition led protests amidst the current situation, the army and intelligence agencies including the SFC would swing into action. The amount of force, brutality and damage in terms of casualties would be devastating. The regime doesn’t mind any such damage since its major concern is to retain power. Therefore, though I am convinced beyond doubt that Ugandans can’t come out to participate in mass action, my sincere advice is that let no one dare think about attempting such a move. The phase for protests came and it played its role thus Ugandans are more politically conscious than ever before. The next phase is for a different type of action and it fits well into the current situation of “uncoordinated troop movement”. Remember you are now dealing with a more lethal ” wounded lion”.

INFORMATION IS POWER AND DEFIANTLY “HITTING ON THE HEAD” IS THE WAY TO GO

What do Mobutu and Museveni have in common after thirty years in power? Massive looting of their state reserves!

Originally posted on: MinBane
Museveni: My critics always forget to mention that I was democratically elected, the others were not. Everyone in Uganda can challenge me, everyone can vote, the elections are free. Not many countries have achieved what we did. One third of the seats in parliament are reserved for women, five seats for youth, five for workers, five for the disabled and 10 for the army. How many democracies with such a record do you know?” (Koelbl & Puhl, 2016).
Just as the knowledge of the all the state businesses and properties of President Museveni that he has amassed over the 31 years in power in Uganda. It reminds more and more of the state of affairs under President Mobutu. Mobutu Sese Seko was a dictator that President Museveni was proud to ouster and reinstate President Laurent Kabila in the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC). So that President Yoweri Kaguta Museveni knows about Mobutu’s fatal fall, is certainly known.

President Museveni has gotten rid of other dictators before the fall of Mobutu, he even knew or had knowledge of the death of the plane of Juvenal Habyarimana, the plane who got shot down in April 1994, as his fellow comrade General Paul Kagame of Rwandan Patriotic Front was on the way to overthrow the current regime there. Also that the President Museveni together with President Milton Obote overthrew President Idi Amin in the late 1970s. So the current President Museveni has been involved in lots of armed change of power, he is even rumored and not verified if he had knowledge of the death of John Garang of SPLA and the South Sudan.
Still, the man who has used force and taken weapons to change history and his own fate, again and again, also to get puppets in states around. Have certainly thought of the demise of the men he got rid off. So when the stories of the last year of Mobutu sounds like this:
Mobutu’s Wealth:
For 32 years President Mobutu has treated Zaire like a toy and used its rich mineral reserves like his own private bank account. He plundered its mines, insisting their entire annual profits be transferred to personal accounts overseas” (…) ““We had to be close to the regime to do business,” admitted Mohammed Abdul, a Lebanese businessman yesterday as he fortified his shop for an expected pre-Kabila pillage by Zaire’s ruthless and brutal army. The Lebanese are hated by Zaireans who believe they colluded with President Mobutu to plunder the country’s diamonds” (Kinshasa, 1997).
Swiss assets:
The decision by the Swiss Federal Council came a day after judicial and police authorities seized his luxurious villa at Savigny near the lakeside resort of Lausanne. The 30-room mansion is estimated to have a market value of more than $5 million” (…) “After three decades of plundering the mineral wealth of his country, Mobutu is believed to have accumulated an enormous fortune. There have been persistent reports that he has stashed as much as $4 billion in Switzerland, but a government review of the country’s 400 banks last week said that none reported having accounts in his name” (Drozdiak, 1997).

Just as you think the dictator of Democratic Republic of Congo would be different than the current one in Uganda, your terribly wrong and President Museveni tries to keep it hidden, the way he is using the state reserves on himself and build his wealth. Just like President Mobutu was trying to move the money to the Swiss accounts, President Museveni has his own way.
A look into Museveni:
The way the Museveni family is paid royalties, or rent, by escrow accounts for their ownership of the title deeds of the Stanbic Bank business name in Uganda (what was once the Uganda Commercial Bank, Uganda’s largest banking group) is the way it is paid for their ownership of other apparently South African or foreign-owned businesses in Uganda” (…)“These sources say that it is Stanbic Bank that is used to finance businesses like Roofings Ltd, Speke Resort Munyonyo, the J&M Hotel along the Kampala-Entebbe highway, businessman Hassan Basajjabalaba’s hotel and Kampala International University, all of which actually belong to the Museveni family” (The London Evening Post, 2012).
This is just the business side of it, it could be worse by now and they could own more pieces of all the businesses that are bailed out or even getting tax breaks by the government, because who knows the true deeds or royalties going to accounts owned by the royal Ugandan Museveni family. So the next says more about the value of the Museveni family and their estates.
Museveni’s wealth includes ranches in Rwakitura and Kisozi Uganda which accommodates over 2,000 healthy cows which produce thousands of liters of milk daily. The Uganda president makes at least Ush 100 million per month from his farm” (…) “Apart from livestock farming, Museveni has interests in real estate, hotel industry as well as transport industry. He has also invested heavily in the banking industry” (…) “The longest serving president of Uganda is estimated to be worth $ 700 million” (Venasnews, 2016).
So when you see how the Museveni family has become as wealth and rich as President Mobutu did. Mobutu had after his 30 years of dictatorship stashed away US$ 4 Billion into Swiss Bank Accounts, what is more uncertain is the total value of the 30 years President Museveni rule in Uganda. What is right now and known is the businesses that the President is involved in or having ownership in. Secondly is the knowledge of estates, as well as ranches in Uganda with livestock that the President owns. Therefore, the extended wealth of secret bank accounts and not revealed businesses could show the true value of the Museveni family.
With the knowledge of this and the sudden departure that President Museveni together with President Kagame, as they forced the dictator away in the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC). I don’t think there will be an intervention on President Museveni from one of the neighbors. Still, the world can see the dictator protocol is kept by Museveni as he himself have crafted ways of emptying the state coffers. Therefore, that the riches, the estates and the value of Museveni have risen over the three decades in power isn’t strange. What is more worrying is how he has been able to keep is wealth and ownership.
That President Museveni wishes to look like a hardworking rancher and that he works for his fortune. The yields are coming from hard-work and dedication. At the same time the ownership in banking industry and in other parts of the economy shows how much control the family and the President does have. The private industries and companies are run or ordered directly from the State House.
So that President Museveni said this in 1997 as he overthrew Mobutu is now insane:
Mr. Museveni’s ideology is simple. For too long, he says, African politicians have hoodwinked the common people, manipulating tribal sentiments to stay in power and steal millions of dollars in foreign aid and taxes. A former Marxist, he sees the true struggle on the continent as one between corrupt leaders and the dirt-poor people they exploit” (McKinley Jr., 1997).
So he said for to long African Politician played the commoners, using the sentiments of tribe on their populations and using this tools to stay in power, while doing so taking an emptying the state reserves and donor funding to themselves. Therefore, 20 years since he stood for this and said these words, he has now done the same.
President Museveni of today would assassinate himself or overthrow himself… since he is now the Mobutu of Uganda, he has the character of the men he overthrew in past. He should be worried, because the ghosts of the past and the reckless leadership will follow him and that is why he trust the guns more than people. Since his own insincere political game might catch up with him.
On some levels now, there aren’t much difference between President Mobutu and President Museveni. Peace.
Reference:
Drozdiak, William – ‘Swiss Freeze Mobutu’s Assets; Reports Put Worth at $4 Billion’ (18.05.1997) link: http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-srv/inatl/africa/zaire/swiss.htm
McKinley Jr., James – ‘Uganda Leader Stands Tall in New African Order’ (15.06.1997) link:http://www.nytimes.com/1997/06/15/world/uganda-leader-stands-tall-in-new-african-order.html
Kinshasa, Mary Braid – ‘Mobutu takes the money and runs to a safe haven’ (16.05.1997) link:http://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/mobutu-takes-the-money-and-runs-to-a-safe-haven-1261945.html
Koelbl, Susanne & Puhl, Jan – ‘’This Is Our Continent, Not Yours’ (10.06.2016) link:http://www.spiegel.de/international/world/interview-with-ugandan-president-yoweri-museveni-a-1096932.html
The London Evening Post – ‘Revealed: How the Museveni family owns Uganda’ (03.01.2012) link: http://www.thelondoneveningpost.com/comments/revealed-how-the-museveni-family-owns-uganda/2/
Venasnews – ‘Yoweri Museveni Salary and Wealth’ (27.06.2016) link:https://venasnews.com/yoweri-museveni-salary-and-wealth/

Revealed: How the Museveni family owns Uganda

By Oryema Johnson, 2002
Karibuni mwaka mupya (welcome to the New Year) and the best of the coming 12 months ahead. After joining New Yorkers in Time Square to welcome 2012 yesterday , this morning, without any hangovers, I sat at the table to have my first coffee of the new year and on the table with my laptop open, I reviewed this article below written in 2009 about Museveni’s family governance of Uganda.
Yoweri Museveni, his son and Commander of Special Forces Muhoozi Kainerugaba and wife Janet who is Minister for Karamoja


The article focuses on how many businesses in Uganda are owned and run by the Museveni family and friends. My attention will not be on the negative aspect of this family empire, but on the positive contribution of the business development.
Looking at the list of business provided, one should take comfort that these are mostly physical assets which any future Ugandan government will take over and re-distribute to its citizens. In essence, this is not a loss, as most would like us to believe, but a positive contribution to Uganda’s development. One positive attribute to this is the number of employments these businesses provide to Ugandans.
I am bringing up this now, to prevent and avoid what happened in 1978-79 when Ugandan exiles returned and wreaked havoc by destroying and looting businesses and houses once owned and run by Nubians. The people who did this were Ugandans who later had to go to the international community to seek money for reconstruction and rehabilitation of what they purposely ruined and destroyed. It would be madness if after Museveni’s fall Ugandans wreaked havoc at Garden City simply because it was once owned by the Museveni family.
Instead of focusing on internal destruction, Ugandans need to pay attention to what the Museveni family and friends are doing outside the country and plan to reposes them. Any development the Museveni family and friends are doing in Uganda, to me, that is positive contribution.
In 1979 great schools in Uganda such as Saint Charles Lwanga College Koboko were looted and destroyed simply because it happened to be in Amin’s village. What kind of nonsense is this leave alone the madness portrayed by the so-called post Amin leadership?
The following is what the Ugandan journalist and writer Timothy Kalyegira wrote two years ago about President Museveni’s family ownership of Uganda:
On March 11, 2009, the news magazine, the Independent, founded by Andrew Mwenda, published a cover story titled “Family rule in Uganda”.

The article examined the structure of effective political power in Uganda today and explained:
“Museveni has appointed his wife, Mrs Janet Museveni, as state minister for Karamoja; his brother, Gen. Salim Saleh, formerly a minister of state for micro finance, as Senior Presidential Advisor on defence, a job at the same rank as a cabinet minister; his brother-in-law, Sam Kuteesa, as minister of foreign affairs; his son, Muhoozi Kainerugaba, commander of the Special Forces, his daughter Natasha Karugire, Private Secretary to the president in charge of Household.
“Museveni has also appointed his nephew, Joseph Ekwau (son of his younger sister Violet Kajubiri), Private Secretary to the President in charge of Medical Services (HIV//AIDS); his sister Miriam Karugaba as Administrator at State House (she is semi-literate) and her husband (therefore Museveni’s brother-in-law), Jimmy Karugaba, as Officer in Charge (OC) of the Accounts Department at State House. Museveni has also appointed his sister-in-law, Jolly Sabune, Executive Director of Cotton Development Authority; his niece-in-law, Hope Nyakairu, Undersecretary for Administration and Finance at State House; his cousin Bright Rwamirama, State Minister for Animal Husbandry; his other cousin, Faith Katana Mirembe, Assistant Private Secretary in charge of Education and Social Services and Justus Karuhanga, Private Secretary to the President in charge of Legal Affairs who is a nephew to Mrs Museveni.”
The article later added: “Many observers say that increasing family influence in government has gone hand in hand with the informalisation of power. Thus, although formal authority is vested in official institutions, effective power is wielded by this informal clique of family and kin. The official structure presents a semblance of national ethno-regional and religious diversity to win the regime legitimacy. The informal but highly powerful structure of the closest of the president’s family and kin is the “real” government.”
That edition of the Independent became the best-selling edition they have ever published and it had to do an additional print run to quench the intense public interest in the story. The day after the story was published, according to Mwenda, a furious President Museveni held a meeting of his family members at State House and said he was going to arrest the Managing Editor, Andrew Mwenda.
However, some of his family urged him not to make that move, as it would give the story greater publicity than it was already getting. They settled on the idea of keeping watch on Mwenda and then one day, at the slightest opportunity, say if he drove past a red traffic light or his car road license expired, arrest him and claim that this was the real reason for the arrest. The story, of course, confirmed in print what many Ugandans knew in fact.
However, it still came as a sensation to thousands of Ugandans who did not know, up to that point, the extent to which national power had been concentrated in the hands of one family, the Museveni family and that there was, in reality, no Uganda government in existence. Whoever thinks they work for a Uganda government is, in effect, working as a servant to the Museveni family.
How, then, did this Museveni family, pretending to be a government, really work? In the middle of the year, a crisis erupted at the national electricity firm, Umeme, the successor to the Uganda Electricity Board (U.E.B) There were all sorts of abuses at the company, the main one being that meters had been tampered with and Ugandans were paying much higher for their power than they should. Also, Umeme, it was said, had been conning the Uganda government of millions of shillings in the arrangement by which the Uganda government was supposed to be subsidizing Umeme each year.
When the crisis turned into a public outcry, President Yoweri Museveni asked his half-brother, Gen. Salim Saleh, to set up a committee to investigate the problem. Computers were seized at Umeme’s offices. “Police anti-fraud squad raided the offices of Umeme, Electricity Regulatory Authority (ERA), Uganda Electricity Transmission Company Limited (UETCL) and confiscated their computers. Police also raided the home of [Umeme Managing Director Paul] Mare. They also raided the office of the energy ministry Permanent Secretary, Fred Kaliisa, and confiscated his computer too,” reported the Independent in its Aug. 11, 2009 edition. These first appeared at this link: http://oneuganda.com/?p=759
Let us recap. Ugandans were told that the government had sold off U.E.B to the South African national electricity company Eskom and this new entity was what later came to be re-named Umeme. The crisis of 2009 was the most serious Umeme had faced in Uganda so far. But something odd was noticeable: no single board director or other official of Eskom, the supposed parent company, flew in from South Africa to Uganda to deal with the crisis or at least address a press conference to allay public frustration and anger.
Instead, President Museveni appointed his brother to probe the Umeme crisis. This should have raised the question of who actually owned Umeme. Somehow, the mainstream media failed to ask the question, at least publicly. A source told the Uganda Record on Saturday Dec. 19, 2009 that “Stanbic Bank belongs to the [First] family. They are paid 200million [Uganda shillings] per month as administration fees via an escrow account in [South Africa].”
An escrow account is a kind of temporary account awaiting verification of goods and services.Sources at Stanbic Bank talk of cheques being signed to pay the Museveni family “administrative fees” even though they do not have supporting documentation to justify or explain the payment.
The way the Museveni family is paid royalties, or rent, by escrow accounts for their ownership of the title deeds of the Stanbic Bank business name in Uganda (what was once the Uganda Commercial Bank, Uganda’s largest banking group) is the way it is paid for their ownership of other apparently South African or foreign-owned businesses in Uganda.
These sources say that it is Stanbic Bank that is used to finance businesses like Roofings Ltd, Speke Resort Munyonyo, the J&M Hotel along the Kampala-Entebbe highway, businessman Hassan Basajjabalaba’s hotel and Kampala International University, all of which actually belong to the Museveni family.
Information gathered by a team of journalists at the Daily Monitor in June shed astonishing light on the extent to which the Museveni family has taken control of Uganda. This information was shared with the Uganda Record.
In 2002, some officials at the African Development Bank (ADB) headquarters in Tunis, Tunisia, and who had once held President Museveni in high esteem, were shocked to discover, after some investigation, that the money that built Garden City shopping complex in Kampala had been from a loan borrowed from the ADB.
However, the ADB officials said that this loan was then used to appear to finance the construction of Garden City, and yet in reality the money that built Garden City had been looted from the Ugandan treasury and the ADB loan was used by the Museveni family to give the Garden City project the appearance of legitimacy.
Employees working at Roofings Ltd., owned by Janet Museveni, openly tell their colleagues about how they have been forwarded to the company by State House and how it is owned by the Museveni family. The chairman of Stanbic Bank Uganda, Hannington Karuhanga, is not without coincidence a cousin to Janet Museveni.
This ownership of Kampala International University is the reason (and there is no other reason) that explains why Hassan Basajjabalaba is repeatedly given bailouts by the Bank of Uganda on orders of President Yoweri Museveni. Sometimes, it almost appears that Museveni is forcing Basajjabalaba to take the money.
Appearing as a guest on Capital FM’s programme Desert Island Discs on Easter Sunday on April 8, 2007, Museveni was asked by the interviewer Desiree Barlow what he planned to do with his life if or when he finally retired as head of state. Museveni was categorical. He said he would go into the hotel industry. Those who do not know what has been going on in Uganda under Museveni were bound to be puzzled. Museveni does not seem like a person interested in the hotel and hospitality industry. Why would he mention hotels as his retirement pursuit?
And since he usually likes to plan his life well in advance, was he going to start taking interest in hotels when he turned 75 or had he already started laying the groundwork for that?
If the Independent magazine thought it had reported on First Family rule in Uganda in its March 11, 2009 edition, it had only touched the tip of the story.
Below is a list of the Museveni family and henchmen’s property in Uganda as compiled by the investigative teams at the Daily Monitor and the Uganda Record. Notice the number of hotels listed:
Akamwesi — Salim Saleh and Hope Mwesigye
Aya Hotel — Yoweri Museveni
J & M Hotel — Janet Museveni
Greenland Towers — Janet Museveni
Roofings Ltd — Janet Museveni
Sameer Dairy Corporation — Yoweri Museveni
Malaysia Furniture — Janet Museveni
Nakumatt complex — Yoweri Museveni
Cham Towers — Yoweri Museveni
Crested Towers — Yoweri Museveni
Imperial Royale Hotel — Yoweri Museveni
Imperial Resort Beach Hotel — Yoweri Museveni
Bidco factory — Yoweri Museveni
Umeme — Muhoozi Kainerugaba
Uganda Telecom — Muhoozi Kainerugaba
Entebbe International Airport — Yoweri Museveni
Orient Bank — Sam Kuteesa
Garden City — Yoweri Museveni
Zain — Salim Saleh
Warid Telecom — Amelia Kyambadde
MTN Uganda — Yoweri Museveni
ARVs drug factory — Yoweri Museveni
Speke Resort Munyonyo — Yoweri Museveni
WBS Television — Yoweri Museveni
The investigating teams at the Daily Monitor, by Dec. 2009, were not yet sure about the ownership of the Serena Kampala Hotel and the International Conference Centre. Information from the Daily Monitor indicates that there was an arrangement that if the Aga Khan was to take over, or buy the former Nile Hotel (now Serena Hotel), then President Yoweri Museveni would own the Bujagali Dam Project and if the Aga Khan wished to own the Bujagali project, then the Serena Hotel would be owned by Museveni.The details of this were still under investigation.
In the eastern town of Jinja, residents had been frustrated by the poor condition of their roads. But when the Bidco factory that produces cooking oil and other products was established in Jinja, suddenly the road that had lay in ruins for years was fully renovated from its start to where it ends right at the Bidco factory. It is a well-known secret in Jinja that the Bidco factory there belongs to Museveni.
Never has greed been so naked, never have the national assets of Uganda been stripped so completely by a single family. The story of the looting of Uganda’s property and the attempt to take total and single-handed control of the Ugandan economy is an even more incredible story than Museveni’s guerrilla adventures.
The revelations of how Uganda found itself in 2009 under the control of a single, as reported by the Independent magazine and investigations by the Daily Monitor and Uganda Record teams is certainly one of the biggest stories of the year, if not in Ugandan history.
Comments made in this article are entirely those of the author of the article and are not necessarily those held or opined by The London Evening Post.