What to do about Owino

After several market fires over the years, you would think another fire at St. Balikudembe Market, also known as Owino would be less surprising or perhaps even less tragic? The answer is no. The Owino society is more than the market and the wooden stalls that burnt down yet again. So far it has been testimony of the city to overcome tragedies. The last time the market went up in flames, traders fearful that sinister forces were at work started rebuilding almost immediately. The market bounced back to normal in a matter of weeks. The fire, like the Kasubi Tombs inferno, took on political implications. Within the market on an ordinary day, traders stand on each other’s shoulders. There are internal broadcasts of self-help news, prayers and debate. If the wider society is uneasy one can feel the pulse in the market. In this way Owino is a very political place. It was a repository of some of the bad blood between the Central Government and the Buganda Kingdom whose celebrations this weekend (for the 18th Coronation Anniversary) will likely be overshadowed by the fire.

The new fire will add to the desperation in the City, which is going through hard economic times. This weekend the buzz was about sugar rationing or even panic buying. One cannot help but feel a dark cloud stalking Uganda. Strikes, fires, political disagreements and a general feeling of the wheels coming off the bus can be heard in offices, meetings and café’s.

Am not sure how fast the market will be re-built. If there is anything that will gesture to the city’s resilience in this trying times is for it to be restored. Where the gulf between the rich and poor of the city is widening, a modern market in Owino will continue to act as a bridge between Golf Course ( Where Garden City and Nakumatt are) and Downtown. And Owino deserves a new market if only because it’s old structures were vulnerable to fire to start with. If the City were serious it would probably expand the market by knocking down the nearby Nakivubo Stadium. Jennifer Musisi over to you.

Witchdoctors working for NRM alleged in Political dialogue on 2011 election.

This has been an interesting week. It kinda topped today with a short presentation i gave to a dialogue of all political parties organised by a Netherlands charity so the competing groups can review the last election.

This is the second time i am attending the dialogue. The first one was before the 2011 election and was opened by President Yoweri Museveni. That time i moderated a debate between the parties where Amama Mbabazi sat in as Sec General. This time around representation of the big cat in the ring ( read NRM) was sparse. Daudi Migereko and Dorothy Hyuha ( she consistently dressed in a neat yellow suit).

When politicians meet like this it is usually a nice chatty atmosphere. During tea break they talk like team mates in a debate competition. The actual proceedings are rather dull ( its usually a long rant about the domination of NRM). The floor displays of word play are really entertaining. David Pulkol yesterday basically swept the floor with comical phrases. ” First they tell you “Vote the man in a hat”. Next they will say vote the man with a stick” he said tongue in cheek about Yoweri Museveni’s ( his long time former boss) age.

To boot Pulkol now with UPC dressed in red ( red tie and shirt). Today it was a stripped red shirt and he looked like a dance maestro from the break dance era. His message yesterday was packaged as the 4′ C’s. Change. Crime. Corruption and Constitutionalism. He really was the Whodunit of barbs.

” Uganda is a walkless democracy” he said about Walk to Work. Its a country that has not gone to the dogs but where the dogs have come to the country.


The JEEMA boss alleged ( and repeated the allegation) that NRM had mobilised a band of witch doctors and traditional healers as a sort of terror squad in the last election. No kidding. Another MP rose today to say his party was starved of media attention ( there is a general belief across all parties that the Daily Monitor was Besigye’s paper).

” If there is any political party that has suffered media malnutrition it is DP and UPC. NRM has enjoyed media oxygen”. Hehehe.

Above all i left feeling politics and politicians are probably not the solution but the problem. I told them that dialogues like this should be an opportunity for across the party lines honest talk about Uganda’s current challenges which include an economic crisis and a coming political crisis in which a sensitive transition within NRM and the country needs to be carefully midwifed.

Sadly the big picture issues were few and far between and i fear politics is rather far from governing challenges even for those who aspire to lead. As i said the dialogue needed to consider that Uganda was a young country and even younger nation i wondered how this will all end.

Politics is very expensive here. In some ways the large public sector is a graft that holds the country together under NRM. If that sector collapses as it becomes too expensive – how will unity be maintained.

There could be democratic reversals. But meanwhile witchdoctors in yellow are vogue

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