ametoa former chief of army who was chief of police with the minister… That’s how rebellions grow, let him ask mugabe
Ugh! Na vile nimekuja mbio nikidhani ni video ya some new dance move!
But unlike Mugabe socialite sons, his son Muhoozi is a major general in Uganda army Updf.
Museveni understands Ugandans and politics only too well, that’s why he’s been in power for 33 years with no really serious challenger.
Whether it’s due to playing dirty is another matter though still part of the game.
Eventually atakanyaga mavi and that will be his undoing.
That’s where he played well,alafu ana backup from kagame
I think what will cause him to leave is if he loses support of UPDF or a major split in his government of relatives.
Hauna habari. Museveni and Kagame are no longer friends!!! Almost ennemies!!
Ebu remove me from my cave what happened
Not exactly enemies, frenemies is more like it, together, they’re still raping Congo’s natural resources.
Expound, both are presidents for life
Just before Christmas, Uganda sent bomber aircraft over the Congo border into the Beni region, supposedly to hunt down the ADF in retaliation for the attack on the UN peacekeepers and for a spate of mysterious killings inside Uganda that, despite a lack of evidence, have also been attributed to the ADF. But the real motive for Uganda’s show of force can more likely be traced to rising tensions with its erstwhile ally Rwanda. Scores of alleged Rwandan spies have been arrested in Uganda, and some claim to have been tortured. Meanwhile, Rwanda has accused Uganda of supporting Rwandan dissidents bent on toppling President Kagame.
Uganda’s leader Museveni is known to have designs on the vast oil deposits beneath Beni—the very territory that, according to Musavuli, Kagame’s forces have been attempting to control for years. Museveni is desperate to begin pumping the estimated 6.5 billion barrels of crude oil on Uganda’s side of the Congo border, in order to free himself from reliance on Western donors. But Uganda’s oil is thick and waxy: getting it to the Indian Ocean for onward shipment to world markets will require running it through the world’s longest heated pipeline, which quadruples the cost of transport relative to that for ordinary crude oil. The French petroleum giant Total has agreed to build the pipeline, but experts say the scheme won’t be cost-effective unless the oil on the Congo side, which happens to be underneath Beni, flows through it, too.
[SIZE=5]Congo for the Congolese[/SIZE]
Helen Epstein
[ul]
[li]I pity ugandans, they are ever crying foul blaming M7 for lack of money but when the dark steps in, the clubs are full to capacity everyday. Its only eastern part of UG hate M7 especially Jinja but the the western, north & parts of central like him.[/li][/ul]
Good read
It might be more complex as I thought
I think his luck has been that life in Uganda has remained relatively cheap and the society peaceful with each other , no big bad tribal aspects … that’s a comfort zone that majority of citizens in a country treasure and care less about a change.
Trees from Congo, the money is in the trees, the proceeds from oil will go to the govt, the proceeds from trees go straight to his pocket.
In the north, people don’t like him. Ni vile tu Kony ravaged those areas but they don’t like M7 one bit.
No one is that smart. He’s bound to blunder at some point.