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Wednesday, December 19, 2012

Events that Portend Conspiracism*


A young woman with a promise of becoming a very effective legislator suddenly dies under murky circumstances. Then the state actors, in what might have been age-old turf wars and ego trips, orchestrate a cavalier blocking of a parallel forensic investigations by other interested parties.

Ms Cerinah Nebanda, MP for Butaleja District died suddenly last Friday in the prime of her life.( MP Cerinah Nebanda is Dead). This is a big deal, and an event of great national import of historical proportion. The country's history is littered with sudden deaths of who-is-who of remarkable Ugandans. The circumstances and the causes of many of such deaths have been kept hush-hush from the public. And there have been whispers, and to nip any doubts seemed to have been the primary motivation for the parallel forensic tests.

By now this government should have wised up. When the government tap dances and threatens jail time for any speculative talks, it is making it worse for itself. It begs the question, and legitimately so: what is it hiding? Times are achanging, and such an event, if not handled well, could conspire with other events to trigger chain reactions. 

*Conspiracism is a word coined by Loren Collins in Bullspotting, Finding Facts in the Age of Misinformation. 
It implies the tendency for conspiracy theories.

Monday, December 17, 2012

The Real Impetus Behind the OPM Massive Thefts

Okadon Akwap, a failed journalist,  is a dubious lecturer in a dubious University belonging to one Hassan Hasajjabalaba, one of the scions of the Museveni economy who pockected government funds in the billions in dubious circumstances. Mr. Akwap came up with a fallacious and specious argument that the OPM thieves were somehow mental cases--a consequence of traumatic experiences in the volatile Uganda--and, by deduction, should not be responsible for their misdeeds. (Graft: Causes Could Be Beyond Greed). One wonders wether Mr. Akwap gained this knowledge from personal experience because for those of us who know him know that at one time he borrowed some money and, when asked, he instead challenged the creditor to a physical fight--a fact that borders on the insane side of the mental spectrum.

On the face of the reportings in the news media, one is stunned by the lack of accounting controls in the management of the Peace Recovery and Development Plan for Northern Uganda (PRDP) Funds. For example, what in the world would make a credible organization deposit huge sums of money in the personal accounts of its officials to carry out the organization duties? It is because of the understanding of human nature that is why accounting best practices require separation of duties and approval processes that may require signing off by the top honcho. All these were seemingly lacking and allowed for easy massive thefts because there were no checks and balances that could have flagged any improprieties early on. This is not surprising because that is the culture of this government whose president, in his one-man running of the country, views checks and balances as a handicap. So, when he talks of his NRM cadres detecting and carrying out forensic audits (after the fact), he is testifying to incompetence and a sign that his government is over its head in managing the country. The President may have had revoultionary successes, but it is time to let go and let dedicated and competent managers take over.

Overall, there is a sense that there was an undercurrent of insidous and obnoxious tribalism at play. The physical and mental traumas and broken public facilities in the North that needed rehabilitation were and are real. There is no contest about that--even the skeptic Kalyegire of the Aminism Denial fame will agree! The PRDP Funds were meant to address that in part. But did the managers of these funds appreciate and were they committed to the mission? It seemed not. What they did with the funds give credence to the notion that the sense of the dehumanized Northerners still lingered--a carryover from the days when the president uttered publicly: We massacred them! Just as the president and his ilks could call Northerners "biological substances," it is not far-fetched to think that those who had their hands in the windfall largesse from donors (aka development partners as if this would cleanse the money from beggarhood) had similar mindset and no sense of responsibility because they inoculated themselves from guilt. After all, the supposed beneficiaries were nonhuman. 

The European donors could take a cue from the US in matters of bleeding-heart aid: Give the funds to NGOs, such  as World Vision, which have verifiable track record of service delivery for clearly identified projects with inputs from the locals.