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- <text id=89TT2902>
- <title>
- Nov. 06, 1989: Uganda:Starting Over In Kampala
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1989
- Nov. 06, 1989 The Big Break
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- WORLD, Page 54
- UGANDA
- Starting Over in Kampala
- </hdr><body>
- <p>Peace slowly revives a country shattered by war and atrocity
- </p>
- <p>By Michael S. Serrill/Reported by Marguerite Michaels/Kampala
- </p>
- <p> The relics of Uganda's bloody past are everywhere. Tanks
- rust along the roads, and shellholes pockmark buildings. In the
- villages north of Kampala, the capital, big plastic bags bulge
- with bright white human skulls, femurs and tibias, the grisly
- remains of some of the estimated 1 million victims of two
- decades of government atrocity, tribal conflict and civil war.
- Now the nearly four-year-old regime of President Yoweri Museveni
- is talking about preserving these bones, perhaps in a museum,
- as a memorial to a time that everyone in Uganda hopes is over.
- </p>
- <p> Peace has come to most of the country, and with it a
- modicum of prosperity. The outdoor markets of Kampala and other
- cities are full of food. Soap, salt and cloth are available in
- stores. Cars and trucks again ply the rutted roads, and offices
- that used to close after lunch so workers could get home before
- the shooting started are now open for business all day. Farmers
- are busy cultivating cassava and coffee. Industrial production
- has begun to revive, and the economy, brought to its knees by
- mismanagement and war, grew 5% last year.
- </p>
- <p> But the biggest change is psychological. For the first time
- since the murderous clown-President Idi Amin took over the
- government in a 1971 coup, Ugandans can walk the streets
- without fear. "I still have no glass in my windows, and I can't
- afford sugar for my tea," says Adam Mayanja, 48, who returned
- to his 32-acre coffee farm north of Kampala three years ago.
- "But I sleep at night. There is peace and I am free."
- </p>
- <p> Credit for all this goes to Museveni, 45, the
- self-described freedom fighter whose National Resistance Army
- triumphantly entered an exhausted Kampala after five years of
- guerrilla war against a series of brief governments that
- succeeded Amin's. Once a firebrand student of economics and
- politics at Tanzania's University of Dar es Salaam, Museveni was
- regarded with some trepidation in Western capitals when he
- emerged from the bush. Now the assessment is almost unanimously
- positive. Museveni, says a U.S. diplomat in Kampala, has been
- "a very effective leader. He has subdued tribal rebels in the
- north, instituted a sort of grass-roots democracy, and even
- managed to hold a successful national election. Politically,
- things are as good as they can be."
- </p>
- <p> Museveni has been building his own kind of democracy. Local
- affairs are run by "resistance councils." Last February voters
- were permitted to cast ballots for added seats to the National
- Resistance Council, Uganda's renamed parliament. But Museveni's
- National Resistance Movement is the only legal political
- organization, and the unelected President last week had the
- N.R.C. extend his term of office five years, to 1995.
- </p>
- <p> The President's greatest achievement has been to increase
- discipline in his 65,000-man army, which includes former rebel
- troops. Says a Kampala business man: "Gone are the days when
- you had to hide your car from greedy soldiers and carry cash in
- your pockets to pay them off when they stopped you." Amnesty
- International reported that although there are still problems
- of torture and arbitrary detention, "the army is more subject
- to the law now than at any time in the last 20 years."
- </p>
- <p> Museveni's highest priority is reviving the economy. When
- Uganda gained its independence from Britain in 1962, it was one
- of Africa's most prosperous countries. Idi Amin not only raped
- the economy for his own personal enrichment, but in 1972 he
- also ejected tens of thousands of ethnic Asians who had formed
- the backbone of commerce. Uganda's per capita income dropped
- nearly half during the 1970s, and exports fell 60%.
- </p>
- <p> Slowly Museveni has turned things around. One step was to
- devalue the Uganda shilling and introduce free-market
- structures to earn $550 million in World Bank and International
- Monetary Fund loans. They are crucial to the economy since the
- plummet of the price of coffee, which accounts for 90% of the
- nation's income. Inflation hovers around the three-digit range,
- and corruption remains rampant. Local businessmen call Museveni
- the government's "only honest man," and even officials charged
- with rooting out misappropriation say that "the problem is so
- immense, there's no way we can tackle the whole of it."
- </p>
- <p> Recent progress aside, life is still hard in Uganda. The
- banks cannot always cash a check, power failures are common, and
- pipes do not always have water. The health system has been
- overwhelmed by AIDS, which has infected as much as 30% of the
- adult population in the southwest.
- </p>
- <p> As for Museveni, he has thwarted two coup attempts, and is
- constantly criticized for favoring his native south, home of
- the predominant Baganda group, over the north, where the Acholi
- and Langi prevail. But the President is confident that his
- nation can again become the breadbasket of East Africa and bury
- forever the bones of its war with itself.
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
-
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