Uganda THE COLONIAL ERA
Kabaka Mutesa I, who reigned from 1856 to 1884
Although momentous change occurred during the colonial
era in
Uganda, some characteristics of late-nineteenth century
African
society survived to reemerge at the time of independence.
Colonial rule affected local economic systems
dramatically, in
part because the first concern of the British was
financial.
Quelling the 1897 mutiny had been costly--units of the
Indian
army had been transported to Uganda at considerable
expense. The
new commissioner of Uganda in 1900, Sir Harry H. Johnston,
had
orders to establish an efficient administration and to
levy taxes
as quickly as possible. Johnston approached the chiefs in
Buganda
with offers of jobs in the colonial administration in
return for
their collaboration. The chiefs, whom Johnston
characterized in
demeaning terms, were more interested in preserving
Buganda as a
self-governing entity, continuing the royal line of
kabakas, and securing private land tenure for
themselves
and their supporters. Hard bargaining ensued, but the
chiefs
ended up with
everything they wanted, including one-half of all the land
in
Buganda. The half left to the British as "Crown Land" was
later
found to be largely swamp and scrub.
Johnston's Buganda Agreement of 1900 imposed a tax on
huts
and guns, designated the chiefs as tax collectors, and
testified
to the continued alliance of British and Baganda
interests. The
British signed much less generous treaties with the other
kingdoms (Toro in 1900, Ankole in 1901, and Bunyoro in
1933)
without the provision of large-scale private land tenure.
The
smaller chiefdoms of Busoga were ignored.
The Baganda immediately offered their services to the
British
as administrators over their recently conquered neighbors,
an
offer which was attractive to the economy-minded colonial
administration. Baganda agents fanned out as local tax
collectors
and labor organizers in areas such as Kigezi, Mbale, and,
significantly, Bunyoro. This subimperialism and Ganda
cultural
chauvinism were resented by the people being administered.
Wherever they went, Baganda insisted on the exclusive use
of
their language, Luganda, and they planted bananas as the
only
proper food worth eating. They regarded their traditional
dress--
long cotton gowns called kanzus--as civilized; all
else
was barbarian. They also encouraged and engaged in mission
work,
attempting to convert locals to their form of Christianity
or
Islam. In some areas, the resulting backlash aided the
efforts of
religious rivals--for example, Catholics won converts in
areas
where oppressive rule was identified with a Protestant
Muganda
chief.
The people of Bunyoro were particularly aggrieved,
having
fought the Baganda and the British; having a substantial
section
of their heartland annexed to Buganda as the "lost
counties;" and
finally having "arrogant" Baganda administrators issuing
orders,
collecting taxes, and forcing unpaid labor. In 1907 the
Banyoro
rose in a rebellion called nyangire, or "refusing,"
and
succeeded in having the Baganda subimperial agents
withdrawn.
Meanwhile, in 1901 the completion of the Uganda
railroad from
the coast at Mombasa to the Lake Victoria port of Kisumu
moved
colonial authorities to encourage the growth of cash crops
to
help pay the railroad's operating costs. Another result of
the
railroad construction was the 1902 decision to transfer
the
eastern section of the Uganda Protectorate to the Kenya
Colony,
then called the East African Protectorate, to keep the
entire
railroad line under one local colonial administration.
Because
the railroad experienced cost overruns in Kenya, the
British
decided to justify its exceptional expense and pay its
operating
costs by introducing large-scale European settlement in a
vast
tract of land that became a center of cash-crop
agriculture known
as the "white highlands."
In many areas of Uganda, by contrast, agricultural
production
was placed in the hands of Africans, if they responded to
the
opportunity. Cotton was the crop of choice, largely
because of
pressure by the British Cotton Growing Association,
textile
manufacturers who urged the colonies to provide raw
materials for
British mills. Even the CMS joined the effort by launching
the
Uganda Company (managed by a former missionary) to promote
cotton
planting and to buy and transport the produce.
Buganda, with its strategic location on the lakeside,
reaped
the benefits of cotton growing. The advantages of this
crop were
quickly recognized by the Baganda chiefs who had newly
acquired
freehold estates, which came to be known as mailo
land
because they were measured in square miles. In 1905 the
initial
baled cotton export was valued at £200; in 1906, £1,000;
in 1907;
£11,000; and in 1908, £52,000. By 1915 the value of cotton
exports had climbed to £369,000, and Britain was able to
end its
subsidy of colonial administration in Uganda, while in
Kenya the
white settlers required continuing subsidies by the home
government.
The income generated by cotton sales made the Buganda
kingdom
relatively prosperous, compared with the rest of colonial
Uganda,
although before World War I cotton was also being grown in
the
eastern regions of Busoga, Lango, and Teso. Many Baganda
spent
their new earnings on imported clothing, bicycles, metal
roofing,
and even automobiles. They also invested in their
children's
educations. The Christian missions emphasized literacy
skills,
and African converts quickly learned to read and write. By
1911
two popular journals, Ebifa (News) and Munno
(Your
Friend), were published monthly in Luganda. Heavily
supported by
African funds, new schools were soon turning out
graduating
classes at Mengo High School, St. Mary's Kisubi,
Namilyango,
Gayaza, and King's College Budo--all in Buganda. The chief
minister of the Buganda kingdom, Sir Apolo Kagwa,
personally
awarded a bicycle to the top graduate at King's College
Budo,
together with the promise of a government job. The
schools, in
fact, had inherited the educational function formerly
performed
in the kabaka's palace, where generations of young
pages
had been trained to become chiefs. Now the qualifications
sought
were literacy and skills, including typing and English
translation.
Two important principles of precolonial political life
carried over into the colonial era: clientage, whereby
ambitious
younger officeholders attached themselves to older
high-ranking
chiefs, and generational conflict, which resulted when the
younger generation sought to expel their elders from
office in
order to replace them. After World War I, the younger
aspirants
to high office in Buganda became impatient with the
seemingly
perpetual tenure of Sir Apolo and his contemporaries, who
lacked
many of the skills that members of the younger generation
had
acquired through schooling. Calling themselves the Young
Baganda
Association, members of the new generation attached
themselves to
the young kabaka, Daudi Chwa, who was the
figurehead ruler
of Buganda under indirect rule. But Kabaka Daudi never
gained
real political power, and after a short and frustrating
reign, he
died at the relatively young age of forty-three.
Far more promising as a source of political support
were the
British colonial officers, who welcomed the typing and
translation skills of school graduates and advanced the
careers
of their favorites. The contest was decided after World
War I,
when an influx of British ex-military officers, now
serving as
district commissioners, began to feel that self-government
was an
obstacle to good government. Specifically, they accused
Sir Apolo
and his generation of inefficiency, abuse of power, and
failure
to keep adequate financial accounts--charges that were not
hard
to document. Sir Apolo resigned in 1926, at about the same
time
that a host of elderly Baganda chiefs were replaced by a
new
generation of officeholders. The Buganda treasury was also
audited that year for the first time. Although it was not
a
nationalist organization, the Young Baganda Association
claimed
to represent popular African dissatisfaction with the old
order.
As soon as the younger Baganda had replaced the older
generation
in office, however, their objections to privilege
accompanying
power ceased. The pattern persisted in Ugandan politics up
to and
after independence.
The commoners, who had been laboring on the cotton
estates of
the chiefs before World War I, did not remain servile. As
time
passed, they bought small parcels of land from their
erstwhile
landlords. This land fragmentation was aided by the
British, who
in 1927 forced the chiefs to limit severely the rents and
obligatory labor they could demand from their tenants.
Thus the
oligarchy of landed chiefs who had emerged with the
Buganda
Agreement of 1900 declined in importance, and agricultural
production shifted to independent smallholders, who grew
cotton,
and later coffee, for the export market.
Unlike Tanganyika, which was devastated during the
prolonged
fighting between Britain and Germany in the East African
campaign
of World War I, Uganda prospered from wartime agricultural
production. After the population losses during the era of
conquest and the losses to disease at the turn of the
century
(particularly the devastating sleeping sickness epidemic
of 1900-
1906), Uganda's population was growing again. Even the
1930s
depression seemed to affect smallholder cash farmers in
Uganda
less severely than it did the white settler producers in
Kenya.
Ugandans simply grew their own food until rising prices
made
export crops attractive again.
Two issues continued to create grievance through the
1930s
and 1940s. The colonial government strictly regulated the
buying
and processing of cash crops, setting prices and reserving
the
role of intermediary for Asians, who were thought to be
more
efficient. The British and Asians firmly repelled African
attempts to break into cotton ginning. In addition, on the
Asian-
owned sugar plantations established in the 1920s, labor
for
sugarcane and other cash crops was increasingly provided
by
migrants from peripheral areas of Uganda and even from
outside
Uganda.
Data as of December 1990
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