REPRESSION
The extreme violence where
Museveni and his NRM enthusiasts have taken Uganda's politics will alienate
many people from meaningful participation in society’s affairs. Already,
Ugandans feel helpless – that their votes mean nothing, and their voices, at
every level of decision-making is muzzled by violent repression
Uganda
is no longer for Ugandans and it is high time the mockery constituted in Art 1
of the overly adulterated 1995 Constitution, that power belongs to the people,
got amended to state unequivocally that "power belongs to the State
managers who own the guns".
Excessive
state violence has alienating citizens from governance. The NRM mindset of
violence is constituted horizontally and vertically. This serves to diminish
legitimate interests in collective ownership of the State, and dehumanizes agents
outside the shades of the repressive state.
The
taming of the Police, militarizing, and criminalizing it, serves the symbolic
purpose of also militarising the socio-political dimensions of society. This is
how power is primarily courted in NRMO and applied to deform society. Ugandan
society is now inverted - deformed, instead of being transformed. Uganda is deformed
from a peaceful, hopeful and a united nation, into criminal, immoral,
unconscionable and violent society.
Public
consensus is now by violence, from ridiculous marriage requirements to bar
brawls, decisions are coercive and fatal at a slight resistance. People now contend
with marrying worthless partners for a fortune under family duress. Everything is
overpriced, inflated and that is,on its own, a form of violence on our conscience!
We
just lost a young talent, Mowzey Radio – a musician, whose death incidentally bound
the nation together in awe of the degree of cruelty, violence, and the
propensity to which all of us are culpable to this violence.
When
Kanyumunyu reportedly gunned down that
youthful social worker, Akena, the nation was engulfed in a ball-fire of grief
and rage. It seems violence at every level is inescapable in this parlance.
Today, many Kanyumunyus lurk on
the street, waiting to strike again on the next victim. But, the Kanyumunyus
are protected by the state and persons who associate with the violent state.
They are at liberty to defend the morally indefensible acts of blatant murder.
The big question that remains unanswered to this date is how weapons have permeated
civilian realms in an era of terrorism.
Violence
in Uganda cannot be divorced from the genesis and corpus of this regime - its
formation, survival, and molding of society through decades and counting.
Violence as an enterprise definitely is the modus operandi through which NRM has
survived for decades.
The Foucaultian governmentality
has come to full bearing – policies, constitutionalism, and delivery of social
services are all designed on the basis of aggression - repression.
State agency is associated with
aggressive and violent acts. Many Ugandans subsisting outside the shade of the state
are increasingly being physically deformed as a result of state abuse of power.
They are dehydrated, malnourished, sicker, fearful, shorter, and smaller than
those protected under the violence of the state. In comparison, those within
the nexus of the violent state realms are bulkier, greedy, fierce, armed,
egoistical, and crooked.
For
the most, social status is borne out of the violence of sectarianism. Ugandans
now weigh their life circumstances with each other based on their tribes, not
education or enterprises. There are those who work so hard but remain poor, and
those that hardly labour but accumulate wealth quickly, or gain promotions faster
than they deserve, just on accounts of their tribe. I think the incarcerated former
DPC Kirumira eluded to this unfortunate reality. However, the UPDF and government
Ministries offer the best case study of sectarianism under this Museveni
regime.
Every Ugandan today is familiar
with, or has been violated by sectarianism, whether in private or public
sector. Sectarianism is a form of tribal violence wrecked on others by the
groups that hold power. It is the reason Baganda will hate Banyankole more than
they ever hated northerners, when this regime falls.
End.
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