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Uganda’s government by loot

Why we need to rethink the ethics of our inherited state institutions and the democratic politics that underpin them.

THE LAST WORD | Andrew M. Mwenda | The revelations of massive abuse of public resources by our legislators led by the speaker, Anita Among, continues to animate public debate on social and traditional media. People are angry, very angry. Many would like to see President Yoweri Museveni apprehend the speaker and send her where she belongs – jail. Yet it is very unlikely he will. I am surprised people are surprised by the theft. Corruption is the way our political system works, not the way it fails. Among has only taken it a notch higher.

I always try to keep my feelings, hopes, aspirations and even values out of my analysis of politics. I believe values cloud judgement of politics. I begin with four questions: if corruption on the scale Among has taken it is a gross moral wrong, why is there no effort in parliament from both NRM or the opposition to censure her? Second, is the anger on social media widely shared by our citizens across the country? Third, do the people of Teso where Among hails from see her acts of self-enrichment as immoral? Fourth, do many voters make a distinction between the private resources of the speaker and the public resources of the state of Uganda?

Let us look to our more democratic neighbour, Kenya where William Ruto was elected president. He had been reviled by the international and local media as the most corrupt man in Kenya. He was accused of having amassed a large personal fortune in hundreds of millions of dollars. Stories were written about him calling every procurement officer in every ministry and government department to get a 10% cut on every deal. He ran against Raila Odinga, a rare politician in Kenya who has not been involved in any serious case of corruption. Raila lost and Ruto won. Why?

From my experience, there is a big gulf between the ethics of the state we inherited from colonial rule and the moral attitudes of ordinary voters. The more corrupt a politician is, the higher are his or her chances of being reelected. Why? Politicians who loot public resources enrich themselves. But they also share this loot with their constituents: they contribute generously to community functions such as funerals, weddings, church services, fundraisings for churches, mosques, hospitals and schools in their constituencies. They also pay school fees, medical bills, and meet funeral and other expenses for the people in their communities.

Do the beneficiaries of such acts of private generosity extended at public expense feel that those contributing are acting unethically? For we must remember that the ultimate judge of the work of an elected politician in a democracy is the voter. In my experience, these acts of kindness and generosity are politically profitable – they cultivate a large following. This is in large part because the voter in Uganda unlike her counterpart in the UK or Denmark, does not distinguish between the private resources of the politician and the public resources of the state. Elections in our part of the world reward the thief and punish the honest.

There is another problem in most of Africa: identity politics. Our countries are multiethnic. This creates its own dynamics. For instance, if Museveni arrested Among today, he would face a political backlash in Teso, her home region. Many people outside of Western Uganda would see such detention as politically motivated. This is partly because people, rightly or wrongly, think Museveni’s close family and tribemates have stolen a lot of money from the state and gone unpunished. The arrest of Among would be politicised as an attack on the Teso people. Museveni can as well get the deputy speaker and other westerners including his fellow Bahima and throw them in jail to demonstrate ethnic even handedness. But many Ugandans, especially in Teso, would not buy into it. Instead, they would see it as an attempt to use these few co-ethnics to disguise his intention to just punish an Atesot.

Many of my intellectual friends in both the domestic and the diplomatic community accuse me of justifying this corruption. Maybe I am guilty as accused. Yet that is not my intention. Far from it, I am inclined to believe that many people tend to moralise rather than analyse politics and corruption. While my arguments come across as justifying it, and perhaps they do, I am driven by the desire to explain it. Across many poor and even many rich countries, this is how politics is played and has been played for ages. This is especially so for democratic politics where politicians need votes from ordinary people to gain and retain public office.

Some argue that these acts of corruption undermine democracy. I would argue that they are manifestations of democracy in a poor country. In fact, as democracy has deepened in Uganda, so has political corruption. The American philosopher, Will Durant, said that there are three forms of government known to man: aristocracy, rule by birth; theocracy, rule by religion and democracy; rule by money. I agree. As democracy has deepened, money has become increasingly central to our electoral process. Americans would agree.

Take India for example; the most consistent democracy in a poor setting. In 2015, the Carnegie Endowment produced a study that showed that, in every election there, the share of criminals elected to parliament increases by 2%. These are the men and women willing to use all sorts of means to raise money to get elected. In 2014, one third (167) of elected MPs in India had a criminal charge, of whom 33 were elected while in jail.

Over the last 30 years of increasing political contestations in Uganda, we have witnessed the progressive attrition of public-spirited persons in our politics. In their place we have seen the gradual and consistent growth in the share of crooks elected to public office. This is the more intriguing because Uganda has a very high anti-incumbency bias. Only 30% of incumbent MPs get re-elected. In the current parliament, only 105 out of 556 of MPs were in the last parliament. In the U.S. and the UK, only 10% of incumbents lose their seats in any election. In Uganda, those who don’t steal enough to placate the myriad needs and demands of their constituencies lose. The more corrupt a politician is, the higher the chances of getting elected. Among will be returned with an even higher vote share at the next election. Cynical, pessimistic, depressing, yes. But it is also a realistic assessment.

*****

amwenda@independent.co.ug

2 comments

  1. Like I noted last week, when people are oppressed and controlled for long by one ruler, they mainly view the world in the narrow lens of the ruler (dictator). It shapes their world, their analysis, their life etc. Even the right is looked at as moralizing or wrong by some journalists such as Andrew, instead of considering such a move to cause conscious awareness.
    Certainly m7 is the reason we have so much money in politics. He is the main reason we have the kind of opposition we have. Andrew likes giving swiping and random examples that don’t apply or make sense. See examples in his article above. For instance, in the UK labour and conservative are opposing parties just like democrats and republicans in the US. It is difficult for any of those parties or one leader to rule them for more than 10 years. They come with different ideas and have shaped policies in their counties in different ways. I hate comparing those counties to Uganda because of huge differences but I was merely highlighting on Andrew’s example. Okay, Kenya-our neighbor but also a distant level of development than Uganda. Kibaki, Uhuru and Ruto were different and thus different legacies. For example at World Bank Kibaki is still nicknamed the president of infrastructure. Uhuru carried on and Ruto is distroying. Difference in leaders Kenya have contributed towards democratic development. Whereas in Uganda, the gun, Museveni family rule and grand scale corruption by the family associates and close elites for all these years apply. https://www.monitor.co.ug/uganda/news/national/suspended-rubaga-deputy-rcc-hands-over-office-4560450

  2. The argument Andrew always makes is that in a poor agrarian society, inefficiencies in administration have always arisen & only when a country becomes economically welloff/wealthy do people in that country adopt different attitudes to integrity of their public officials. While their is truth to this assessment I wonder whether the likes of Among know the implications of their actions.
    Yes the usa/uk became advanced nations despite not having perfect universal suffrage or harbouring backward attitudes in treating persons of other races but the era of mismanaging & making it eventually may be over. Post ww2 dev’t miracles like: Korea, Taiwan, Singapore, Ireland, etc, brought a certain level of discipline/competence to managing their upward trajectory, they focused on building human capital through investments in health & education, improved the business environment through various schemes, with all this coming together to build growth.
    When becoming an mp goes to the most crooked we may be keeping away the smartest, the president then has a dumb bunch from which to compose his cabinet. They can’t come up with good policies to attract business & investment so capital goes to more organized countries, the 10b the speaker wastes on parties, buying dresses or foreign trips may seem like trivial corruption but that’s money not going towards improving education, the labs in public universities are dismal with outdated or no equipment which may cost even less. When we graduate young men/women in a field like computing that is growing fast but they don’t even have employable skills due to poor education they received we are creating another generation of adults who are going to end up poor & raise children in poor households, & the cycle continues. Meanwhile 300 years from now we will still be a poor country with our great grandchildren blaming colonialists, yet we had a certain Among as speaker who instead of putting money towards school meals so children don’t face stunted physical & mental development, she chose to go shop at the Champs Elysee. If Edward Banfield was still alive to write a sequel of his classic – Moral basis of a backward society, Uganda would be his case atudy

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