Hon. Paul Kawanga Ssemogerere
A lot has been said about the 1980 elections having been rigged. What exactly happened?
The
1980 election was on the issues and expectations of all of us who
participated. It was an occasion, an opportunity for us to allay our
disappointments since independence. We had fought for independence and
achieved it but the political results were not as we had expected. And
this was evident when we assembled in Moshi, [Tanzania] in 1979. We
wanted to have a legitimate government because the 1962 elections
produced a government which was conceived on fraud, by the admission of
its own architects.
You see the UPC faction felt that they had a
wrong partner in KY (Kabaka Yekka) and the KY faction also felt they had
a wrong partner. So only after two years of independence the alliance
collapsed, the monarchy was destroyed in 1966 and (Milton) Obote sought a
new ally in the military.
In 1971, Obote’s alliance with the military also
collapsed and he fled to exile. In Moshi, we had agreed on a
transitional period so that we would organise a free and fair election
in accordance with the wishes of the people. We looked at 1980 as an
opportunity to produce a government that was based on the will of the
people. There was a lot of support for the Democratic Party from all
over the country, wherever. People volunteered to offer free services,
people offered money, free housing, whatever they could. And above all
there was reconciliation. The gulf that had existed between the
Democratic Party and the supporters of KY in Buganda had been bridged.
The most prominent leaders of KY in 1962 became
prominent campaigners of DP in 1980. Take the example of Nkonge, the
father of Sarah Nkonge, Lutaaya, the father of Brig Lutaaya and others.
These were some of the closest friends of Mutesa and they were very
powerful leaders. They all came on board. Eldard Muliira, the leader of
the Progressive Party in the 1960s, also joined us. Prince George
Mawanda, Sebaana Kizito who was Eldard Muliira in the Progressive Party
in the 1960s, also joined.
And you would say that was natural given what had happened between KY and UPC …
Oh
yeah, that is right. It was reconciliation. And in fact those were the
lessons between 1962 and 1980. Many of us had remained in constant
interaction with these people. We kept meeting quietly, discussing what
was happening and what needed to be done. So there was a meeting of
minds. It was harvest time for us.
You have only talked Buganda though…
I
am concentrating on Buganda because the weakness for us was here; that
is where we lost the 1962 elections. But equally outside Buganda, we got
some people, prominent ones, who had been in UPC. Shaban Opolot, the
first army commander who had been sacked and detained, joined us and was
a DP candidate in Teso. Adoko Nekyon, Obote’s cousin - a very powerful
UPC man in the 1960s - also supported us. Actually he tried to stand on
our ticket in Lango but he was stopped.
There was Aloysius Ngobi, a very powerful man in
Busoga. He was a minister for Agriculture under Obote, one of the five
ministers Obote arrested in 1966. He is still alive. Then we had some
who had crossed to UPC in the 1960s but came back to DP in 1980, like
the elder brother of Henry Kajura. He was the leader of the DP campaign
in Bunyoro. So I could see this everywhere.
So what went wrong?
The facts
on the ground are these. We tried as hard as possible to minimise risks
of cheating; to minimise the influence of the military. We spent a lot
of hours negotiating with Mwalimu Nyerere [the president of Tanzania].
He did what he could but he didn’t do enough. He probably couldn’t do
enough or it was his wish that Obote should return because he was his
friend. Probably he wanted to help him regain power and rule well. Well,
that is a long story and we can’t finish it … my frustrations. But at
least Nyerere realised later that the course I took helped to save a
lot. From the reports we got from all over the country.
From Kapchorwa, Tororo, Kigezi, everywhere, we
were headed for victory. And, I should say this, Vincent Ssekkono was
secretary to the electoral commission and at some point he sent
congratulations to me (that I had won). When the results started coming
in and it was all obvious that we would get the necessary seats to win
the election, then Paul Muwanga issued Proclamation No 9, which stopped
returning officers from announcing results and take all the results to
his office. He was the Chairman of the Military Commission, which was in
charge of the country by then. He later, of course, announced doctored
results.
Do you have a way a scientific way to tell that you were rigged out?
The
rigging was in the open. Talk to Mariano Drametu, he is still around in
Moyo. He was one of those who were stopped from running. Then you talk
to Eng Sam Drale. They stopped him at a road block. They held him there
for the duration of the nomination and they released him when the
nomination was closed. So these things did take place. And you remember
that the presidency that time was won based on the number of elected MPs
a party had. That is why they resorted to sabotaging the nomination and
election of our candidates. So those things happened in Busia, in so
many other places. That was a tragedy and people can freely search into
that. They can go case by case and document it.
Did Obote challenge you to parade your generals?
Yes.
He didn’t say it many times, he said it once and I had my reaction to
that. Again this speaks to how a legitimate government is formed in a
democracy. It is very important for your generation. We take democracy
to be a government of the people, for the people and by the people. You
relinquish power and give it to the people to decide.
If you corrupt the judiciary and the military,
they cease to be professional and politically impartial. They side with
you and campaign for you. Then you cannot talk about legitimacy. The
danger we face even now is that it is being taken for granted that one
needs the army on their side to win an election and maintain a
government. Obote did it, Museveni is doing it now. It is a tragedy that
Ugandans must fight to get out of. So, yes, Obote said that. But that
was his weakness, not his strength.
So how come you took up your seat in Parliament after the election?
Yes,
we took up our seats in Parliament and I have been vindicated. First of
all it was a hard decision to take but it was taken democratically. In
my conscience, I had to mull that question. Should we boycott
Parliament, should we join? If we boycott, what do we do?
There were very strong voices for boycotting
Parliament, and very strong voices for going to the bush. We thought
that we had a special role to promote reconciliation and national unity
at that very difficult period in our history. We thought that was better
for the country. When I look back now, it was the right decision. But I
didn’t take it alone, it was a collective decision. I called the
National Council and we sat here at Rubaga Social Centre. All the DP
leaders and the members who had participated in the elections – those
who had won and those who had lost - turned up for the meeting. We
decided to take up our seats in Parliament.
Any regrets for having done that?
Not
at all. Some people have said we legitimised a fraudulent government.
Nothing is farther from the truth because at no time did we concede. But
we used the platform of Parliament to do things that would otherwise
have been impossible for us to do under those very difficult
circumstances. I was Leader of the Opposition and shadow minister for
defence and security.
I used the opportunity to interface with Muwanga,
Oyite-Ojok and others. We would argue over important things and
sometimes I would score points. I don’t know how many lives I saved
through these interactions. I would sometimes go with John Kawanga and
Henry Ssewannyana to meet Muwanga. And some people would have been dead
if we hadn’t carried out these efforts. There are people I got from the
Central Police Station when they were destined to be killed. Others I
picked from Makindye, there was a go-down there which was very
dangerous, and many other things. I think generally we played a historic
role. We gathered information, we fed Amnesty International and many of
the people whom we recommended were taken good care of.
Are you referring to the famous Black Book?
Oh,
yes, yes. It worked very much. It was a device which I found worth
pursuing to expose wrong doing. The Black Book was a deterrent; it was
to warn you that whatever crime you committed was being documented and
that it could all come back to haunt you in the future.
It actually worked very well as a deterrent. I
remember some of these members of the government of the time feverishly
asking me, now sir what is my number in the Black Book, what did I do
wrong? It actually worked very well as a deterrent.
So our decision
to join Parliament, even after the fraudulent election, boosted our
party internationally. We staged an international colloquium here in
1984 to mark 30 years of the Democratic Party, a big international event
like no other political party in Africa had organised before. And we
did it against the wishes of the government. Muwanga tried to stop us
and I told him that some of our guests were already air-borne. The
guests included the Prime Minister of Italy at the time.
Was Museveni on rampage in the bush then?
Ah,
no. Museveni was on the retreat at the time. He was fleeing to the
Rwenzoris. He only bounced back after the coup by the Okellos.
So how and why do you end up serving in military junta that follows shortly afterwards?
Yes,
I justify our participation in the Okello and Museveni governments. I
justify it historically. Look at the situation on the ground. We were
the force to reckon with, locally and internationally. Our stature had
grown exponentially. In fact, the Okellos might have been encouraged to
stage their coup by the success of our colloquium in 1984, which showed
that we had massive support within the country and internationally.
There were internal divisions within the
government and the army and it was clear that Muwanga was at loggerheads
with Obote and Chris Rwakasisi. It was more or less like now, with the
government divided. Being Leader of the Opposition, I was talking to all
these people. So immediately after the coup, the Okellos reached out to
us and we entered negotiations.
We gave them our conditions, chiefly to return the
country to democratic rule as quickly as possible by organising
democratic elections, and to end the fighting as quickly as possible and
to maintain rule of law. They agreed to our conditions. The roles they
gave us were consistent with our demands. I was made minister for
Internal Affairs, for instance. I released all political prisoners,
virtually all of them. I said I didn’t believe in detention without
trial.
And Bazilio and Tito allowed you?
They
agreed. I didn’t do it unilaterally. I made a case for it. When I
became minister I brought the issue on the table. Ask Olara Otunnu, he
also supported me strongly. He was minister for Foreign Affairs, a very
powerful minister because he is a relative of Tito Okello.
One of my greatest supporters was Wilson Toko, who
was vice chairman of the Military Commission. He supported me strongly.
I made my case, Muwanga warned against it but I took the day. We
released about 2,000 of them openly.
Tell us about what have been called the Nairobi “Peace Jokes”
They
call them jokes but they were not jokes. Toko was chairman of the
negotiating commission on behalf of the government and I later took over
from him. As far as I am concerned, we actually finished our job
because we got them to sign. Museveni signed on paper to end the
fighting and form a government of national unity in which he was
supposed to be vice president. We came back as heroes just before
Christmas in 1985. Unfortunately, the Musevenis continued with their
fighting.
So how do you end up joining forces with Museveni?
When
Museveni came he invited me. He sent Winnie Byanyima and Kaka, who is
in Kalangala now. He was a DP youth winger from Bunyoro in the 1980s. I
went and met Museveni at Nabbingo Parish. He was making overtures that
we join them. I was with other members including Sebaana Kizito. So we
negotiated. One of the sticky issues was political parties. Museveni
wanted to ban parties. Talking to us, he was blaming UPC for the chaos.
We told him that if UPC is a bad party, people will shun it and join the
good ones. But you cannot use that to ban political parties. We agreed
on some minimum points on the basis of which we joined.
When we joined, we set up a negotiation team
headed by the late Justice Mulenga. The team had John Kawanga, Sebaana,
Robert Kitariko and others. On Museveni’s side was the late Sam Njuba
and his wife Gertrude, and others. We agreed on some points on which to
work as allies although for the nine years we were with them much of it
came to naught. But there were some positives. For instance, I can tell
you that I was not inhibited from carrying out my work as minister for
Internal Affairs and as minister for Public Service. You can go and find
out what I did.
What did you do?
Like in
Internal Affairs, I refused to sign a single detention order even when
messages came from wherever. I saved the police. Museveni never wanted
the police. He wanted the military to take over completely. That was his
idea even in the Nairobi peace talks. As minister for Internal Affairs,
Museveni put pressure on me to do away with the police but I stood my
ground. You can ask (Al Hajj Moses) Kigongo because he led a team which
included Salim Saleh and (now Internal Affairs minister Gen Aronda)
Nyakairima to prevail over me to do away with the police. They told me
that this was Obote’s police that needed to be done away with. I said to
them that the NRA were not angels from heaven. I said that we would
screen the police. Those who were unqualified would get further
training, and so on. And that is how we got to build Masindi Police
Training School.
Tell us about the controversies in the Constitution making process
You
have to be very grateful to the late Prof Dan Nabudere. We worked with
him closely on this project. When we were elected to the Constituent
Assembly in 1994, some of us had already identified ourselves as pro
political parties. I was still in the government but even Museveni knew
it that I was strongly for multi-partyism.
In fact, if you want to know why I left the
government, it was on that ideological ground. Museveni sincerely didn’t
believe in the restoration of multi-partyism and I couldn’t compromise
on that. Those of us who were strongly for multi-partyism discovered one
another and we formed a caucus called the National Caucus for Democracy
and the secretary general for that forum was Nabudere. In the Caucus
was Cecilia Ogwal and many others.
Did the Caucus also include people from NRA/M like the late Sserwanga Lwanga and Kizza Besigye?
They
did not come to the Caucus but Sserwanga was coming here. Kizza Besigye
was by the time probably not yet very convinced of this multi-party
thing. But he was clearly slowly getting tired of the Movement thing. We
would talk. But Sserwanga was very enthusiastic. There were other
people like Jotham Tumwesigye, he is now a judge. He was very balanced.
People like (Prof George) Kanyeihamba were unfortunately not
convinced yet of the evils of the NRM. This (Gen David) Sejusa was on
the margin, but closer to our side than Besigye. I used to get
information about what happened in the Movement Caucus from Sserwanga.
We pushed for the abolition of the Movement system. We presented the
case for multi-partyism as strongly as possible and when the CA rejected
multi-partyism we walked out of the deliberations during the CA, 68 of
us.
DP will be 60 next month. Don’t you get a feeling it is considerably weakened?
You have got to see what has been happening to other parties. Tell me which political party has stood? Look at UPC, the power they had and everything. Where are they now? The reason is that these people don’t want political parties. They do everything to kill the parties, we just happen to survive.
You have got to see what has been happening to other parties. Tell me which political party has stood? Look at UPC, the power they had and everything. Where are they now? The reason is that these people don’t want political parties. They do everything to kill the parties, we just happen to survive.
The tragedy in Africa is that whoever takes power
has to kill the old parties. Where is Kanu in Kenya? Where is Banda’s
party in Malawi? Where is Nkrumah’s party in Ghana? The leaders in
government, not all of them, but those who matter, don’t like political
parties. You should read (Museveni’s) Sowing the Mastered Seed. He is
very categorical. He criticises us for spearheading multi-partism. He is
honest about it.
Now as a watcher of developments, where do you see the country headed?
For me, I don’t want that question of where do I see the country going. The point I have been making to you the young intelligencia is that it is a challenge. My role is to analyse things as I see them. I say that the struggle should continue. When I look at what role I have had to play, together with people like Ben Kiwanuka, Mulenga and others, I think we have played our part.
For me, I don’t want that question of where do I see the country going. The point I have been making to you the young intelligencia is that it is a challenge. My role is to analyse things as I see them. I say that the struggle should continue. When I look at what role I have had to play, together with people like Ben Kiwanuka, Mulenga and others, I think we have played our part.
I think the situation would have been much worse
if there was no Ben Kiwanuka or Mulenga. If he had been in power, it
would have been much better, but what we contributed has been good. For
the party, for democracy, for the country. I look at the Constitutional
petitions I filed and won; the country would have been much worse if I
hadn’t filed them.
Of course there are many pending matters which
should be raised by you people. You can change things. Some of you have
got friends in the military, in the government and so on. So if you are
convinced the way we were, you tell them. For instance, we had a seminar
on security in 1984 and I gave a paper on security in Gulu in which I
criticised the use of the military for political purposes. The army
commander in the area knew of it and he came to my hotel room to
challenge me about it. I asked him how old he was and he said 36. He was
a colonel. So I asked him, where are the colonels who were here under
Obote I or under Idi Amin? He couldn’t show me any.
They had either been killed or they were in exile.
I said to him, if you go out there you will find retired priests,
retired doctors, retired teachers, why is the life expectancy of you
soldiers so short? I told him that I wanted to see him around after 20
years and that the only way he would be around was if he did not allow
the regime of the day to use him to do wrong things.
Any clear pointers as to where the country is headed?
Well, let me say this. Whatever we have gained on the democracy front has come at a heavy cost. But, unfortunately, there are signs that suggest that the gains we have made are reversible. I will offer examples. The retention of the Movement Act (1997) in our Statute books is a constant reminder that we could slide back into a monolithic state. Also, the retention, in their present form, of Articles 69 and 74 of the Constitution, which do not completely guarantee multiparty politics, is another sad reminder.
Well, let me say this. Whatever we have gained on the democracy front has come at a heavy cost. But, unfortunately, there are signs that suggest that the gains we have made are reversible. I will offer examples. The retention of the Movement Act (1997) in our Statute books is a constant reminder that we could slide back into a monolithic state. Also, the retention, in their present form, of Articles 69 and 74 of the Constitution, which do not completely guarantee multiparty politics, is another sad reminder.
There is also Article 78 of the Constitution which
allows serving military officers to become full-fledged MPs with voting
rights. There are provisions in the UPDF Act in which the UPDF retains,
intact, the composition and powers of its precursor, the NRA, including
operating a parallel court system to the civilian judiciary which has
powers to even condemn an accused person to death. These and other
things worry me.
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