Uganda POLITICAL DYNAMICS
Downtown Kampala
Courtesy Carl Fleischhauer
Clock tower in Mbale
Courtesy Carl Fleischhauer
When the NRM took power in 1986, it added a new element
to
the unsolved political issues that had bedeviled Uganda
since
independence. It promised new and fundamental changes, but
it
also brought old fears to the surface. If this government
demonstrated magnanimity toward its opponents and
innovative
solutions to Uganda's political difficulties, it also
contributed
significantly to the country's political tensions. This
paradox
appeared in one political issue after another through the
first
four years of the interim period. The most serious
political
question was the deepening division between the north and
the
south, even though these units were neither administrative
regions nor socially or even geographically coherent
entities.
The relationship of Buganda to the rest of Uganda, an
issue
forcibly kept off the public agenda for twenty years,
re-emerged
in public debate. Tension between the NRM and the
political
parties that had competed for power since independence
became a
new anxiety. In addition, the government's resort to
political
maneuvers and surprise tactics in two of its most
important
initiatives in 1989, national elections and the extension
of the
interim period of government, illustrated the NRM's
difficulties
in holding the nation to its political agenda.
Data as of December 1990
|