By Kalundi Serumaga Commentary is now revolving around marveling at “Mzee’s” magezi in outmaneuvering yet another opponent One of the main problems faced in Uganda politics, is to find oneself trapped in an argument about who is “less wrong”, between two sides that are both in the wrong to begin …
Read More »Gays and hypersexualised Western culture
By Kalundi Serumaga Debate has camps that think indigenous African society is not capable of formulating its own view of the matter The current debate –or near shouting match- about the legal future of Ugandan sexuality marks the point where two Europes; one from the present and another from the …
Read More »What eats Buganda, eats Bunyoro too
By Kalundi Serumaga Nigerian author Chinua Achebe tells us of a proverb questioning the judgement of a man who, while fighting a fire consuming his house, drops his bucket to chase the rats fleeing from the same flames. There are perhaps those who could defend such behaviour. Maybe the rats …
Read More »Somalia piracy: A chicken or an egg?
By Kalundi Serumaga Which came first: the instability of the region due to Somalia’s collapse, or Somalia’s collapse due to the instability of the region? Somalia’s story is a continuation of one that started centuries ago, and that stretches far beyond her 3000 km of troubled coastline. It is a …
Read More »Economy: Where Next?
By Kalundi Serumaga The Ugandan government has finally woken up. It has accepted that the western economic crisis will indeed have a seriously negative impact on Uganda Such an admission is no small matter for people who have been enthusiastic advocates of completely opening up Africa’s economies to Western engagement, …
Read More »The long way home
By Kalundi Serumaga This is the second and last part of this Outlook as the author comments on technocrats and leaders `who remain silently loud on issues they once propagated. In Africa, capitalism first came in search of free labour giving rise to the transatlantic slave trade. It then developed …
Read More »Global crisis: It’s been a long way back home
By Kalundi Serumaga There are times when a moment of silence can seem louder than actual noise. The current silence of those who were previously the vigorous advocates of imposing the Western neo-liberal economic doctrines of ‘donate, privatise and sell’ on Uganda, is one such moment. What little commentary they …
Read More »