Tuesday, 20 May 2014 20:50
For every day that Ugandan troops stay in South Sudan, ostensibly to keep peace, we officially spend Shs 277m.
This cost does not include the life some of our soldiers have lost
trying to prevent the collapse of President Salva Kiir’s government,
injuries, plus wear and tear of our equipment.Therefore, for every month that we have stayed in South Sudan, we have spent Shs 8.3bn.
Minister of state for Defence Abu-Baker
Jeje Odongo gave this information to the parliamentary committee on
Defence and Internal Affairs, to which I am a member, on May 7.
He, with senior officials from the
ministry, had appeared to present their next financial year’s budget.
The commander-in-chief had projected that our troops would stay in South
Sudan for not more than three months, according to Odongo.
Going by the figure of Shs 8.3bn per
month, it means that for the five months we have been there, the cost of
executing a war that no regional, continental or international body has
assigned us, is officially Shs 41bn.
We have also caused wanton destruction
in this new nation. When the rebels of former South Sudan vice
president, Riek Machar, hit us on January 15, we flew in the
much-talked-about jets and nearly erased the town of Bor in retaliation.
These foreign military expeditions can
be abnormally expensive. Take the example of Somalia where we spend Shs
550m a day, translating into Shs 16.5bn a month and about Shs 200bn a
year. We are lucky someone else is picking the Somalia bill. Our only
loss in Somalia is life and some equipment, which, by the way, is also
compensated.
In South Sudan, however, we are footing
the bill, although senior officials there claim they are paying.
Odongo told us in the meeting, which I attended briefly, that South
Sudan would now meet the fuel cost.
The commander-in-chief treats us with
contempt. His Defence minister, Dr Crispus Kiyonga, and Chief of Defence
Forces Gen Edward Katumba Wamala, all lied to parliament. They
aggressively asserted that our mission was to rescue hundreds of
Ugandans, and that is why they had deployed at the Juba airport.
Yet the ordinary person needs this money
badly. Kyadondo East, which I represent in parliament, comprises two
sub-counties (Kira town council and Nangabo sub-county). Nangabo, which
comprises Gayaza, Kasangati, Wattuba, Masoli, Bulamu, Kabubbu, Wampewo,
Nangabo and Katadde, has 52 community access roads.
The government gives us just Shs 18m per
quota (three months) to maintain these roads. This means Shs 6m per
month for road maintainance. In truth, we have been abandoned to
ourselves. What the population has done is to wait for the vote-hunting
MPs – a soft target.
Just imagine spending Shs 277m per day,
fighting a war in a foreign country, and just Shs 200,000 per day, on
grading and maintaining roads in one of the fastest growing urban areas!
And for unknown reasons, Nangabo is
still categorised as a rural sub-county, which doesn’t qualify for even a
single kilometre of a paved road. The above is just half the story. The
full story is that government has submitted to parliament a second
request to spend more money than what was budgeted for this financial
year ending next month. We had not even considered the first request.
In the second request, government wants
authority of parliament to spend Shs 196bn. The biggest request is from
Defence. They want Shs 170bn for unexplained reasons. The first vague
reason is that they need Shs 85bn to top up their classified
expenditures and another Shs 85bn “to address urgent security challenges
that require urgent attention.”
You certainly don’t need any expertise
to know where this money will end. Part of it will go towards financing
the South Sudan war and the rest to bribe the population so it can bear
with the man for another period.
Bribery is now the biggest preoccupation at State House. Everything that the big man orders must be accompanied with boxes of shilling notes.
Bribery is now the biggest preoccupation at State House. Everything that the big man orders must be accompanied with boxes of shilling notes.
And in this circus, we have lost faith
in our country. The ministry in charge of urban planning is given just
about less than a billion shillings to plan for the whole country.
Also, in all this, you should ask yourself, “what is the share of the ordinary soldier who keeps this regime in power?”
The answer is in visiting barracks. I
pass by one every day in Mbuya, where our soldiers still sleep like
goats. Their senior commanders ride in the latest Land Cruiser models
while going to their comfortable offices at the army headquarters.
Then I keep asking myself: does the
commander-in-chief really like his soldiers? What about spending half
the money being requested for right and left on the welfare of these
soldiers?
semugs@yahoo.com
The author is Kyadondo East MP.
semugs@yahoo.com
The author is Kyadondo East MP.
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Comments
+2
#1
2014-05-20 22:14
I remember what Prof.
Kiddu Makubuya said when he was leaving his ministerial position: "There
is time for everything under the sun. A time to ...... and a time to
......"
I am consoled by the fact that TIME is working in favour of Ugandans. It won't be too long before change occurs - it doesn't matter how. Watch this space!
I am consoled by the fact that TIME is working in favour of Ugandans. It won't be too long before change occurs - it doesn't matter how. Watch this space!
0
#2
2014-05-21 08:19
Like one said, if
ordinary people really knew what is going on with the government they
have, if they got to knowing the inner workings and expenditures,
believe me many would have longed for better death.
On my part when ever i read about the destructive nature of m7 nd his government, i feel like i must assasinate him at any momet on sight.
On my part when ever i read about the destructive nature of m7 nd his government, i feel like i must assasinate him at any momet on sight.
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