Tag: Yoweri Museveni

  • Ugandan president replaces ministers

    Ugandan President Yoweri Museveni replaced his finance, security and transport ministers in a reshuffle on Sunday, which analysts said was aimed at rewarding his allies ahead of an election due early next year.

    Museveni, in power since 1986, is widely expected to seek re-election. He has been under mounting pressure from local and international critics who accuse him of failing to tame pervasive corruption and for seeking to hold onto the presidency for as long as possible.

    The president is voted in for a five-year term but there are no limits on how many terms he can serve, Reuters says.

    In the reshuffle, Matia Kasaija, a junior finance minister was promoted to finance minister, replacing Maria Kiwanuka, who will become senior presidential adviser for finance.

    Charles Rwomushana, a political analyst, said the changes were also aimed at bringing politicians seen as sympathetic to Museveni’s former prime minister, Amama Mbabazi, into the cabinet.

    Mbabazi is widely expected to stand against Museveni in next year’s election.

    “The two key objectives of the reshuffle were to show that loyalty pays and also to offer opportunity to those who might defect to Mbabazi,” Rwomushana said.
    The electoral commission has yet to set an exact date for the election.

     

  • Mugabe backs Uganda’s anti-gay law

    Mugabe backs Uganda’s anti-gay law

    Zimbabwean President Robert Mugabe has wadded into the dispute between Ugandan President Yoweri Museveni and the West after the East African leader signed anti-homosexuality laws.

    Mugabe spoke on the matter while addressing guests at his daughter Bona’s wedding at the weekend

    He said the threats by the U.S. to cut aid to Uganda, following the signing of the anti-gay bill on the basis that it violated human rights showed that the U.S. had no honour.

    “The human right you have as a man is to marry another woman, not to get another man to marry,’’ Monday’s Herald newspaper quoted Mugabe saying.

    The bill which originally carried a death penalty was first introduced in 2009 but was shelved when the West threatened to withdraw aid to Uganda.

    However, Uganda’s parliament passed it in December, only replacing the death penalty with a proposal of life in prison for “aggravated homosexuality’’, which includes acts in which one person is infected with HIV, “serial offenders’’ and sex with minors.

    Museveni has told the West that they can keep their aid and should not impose moral values on his country.

    The World Bank has since shelved a 90 million dollars loan to Uganda as it considers whether the new law will not adversely affect the development objectives of the loan.

    Many African leaders are opposed to homosexuality and in Zimbabwe; gay rights became a hot issue during the crafting of a new constitution which came into effect in 2013.

    Mugabe’s party Zanu-PF led the crusade against homosexuality and ensured that a clause outlawing same sex marriages was included in the new law.

  • Church of England condemns anti-gay marriage law

    Church of England condemns anti-gay marriage law

    The Church of England has written to President Goodluck Jonathan, urging him to reverse the law banning same-sex marriage in Nigeria.

    It also wrote to the Primates of the Anglican churches worldwide, protesting against the anti-gay law in Nigeria and Uganda.

    The Church of England urged the Church of Nigeria (Anglican Communion) to safeguard the interest of gays and lesbians.

    The letter was written jointly by Archbishops of Canterbury and York and addressed to President Jonathan and Ugandan President Yoweri Museveni.

    Archbishops Justin Welby and John Sentamu said the letter was a response to questions about the Church of England’s attitude to new legislation in several countries prohibiting same-sex unions.

    The Archbishops of Canterbury and York recalled the commitment by the Primates of the Anglican Communion to the pastoral support and care of everyone worldwide, regardless of their sexual orientation.

    They recalled the words in the communiqué issued in 2005 after a meeting of Primates from across the Communion in Dromantine.

    The text of the joint letter is as follows: “Dear Brothers and Sisters in Christ,

    “In recent days, questions have been asked about the Church of England’s attitude to new legislation in several countries that penalises people with same-sex attraction. In answer to these questions, we have recalled the common mind of the Primates of the Anglican Communion, as expressed in the Dromantine Communiqué of 2005.

    “The communiqué said:

    ‘…We wish to make it quite clear that in our discussion and assessment of moral appropriateness of specific human behaviours, we continue unreservedly to be committed to the pastoral support and care of homosexual people.

    “’The victimisation or diminishment of human beings, whose affections happen to be ordered towards people of the same sex, is anathema to us. We assure homosexual people that they are children of God, loved and valued by Him and deserving the best we can give – pastoral care and friendship’.

    “We hope that the pastoral care and friendship that the Communiqué described is accepted and acted upon in the name of the Lord Jesus.

    “We call upon the leaders of churches in such places to demonstrate the love of Christ and the affirmation of which the Dromantine communiqué speaks.”

     

  • Sudan rivals meet for peace talks

    Sudan rivals meet for peace talks

    TAlks between South Sudan’s government and rebels are due to start later on Tuesday in Ethiopia, mediators say.

    The two sides are expected to reach an agreement on the cessation of hostilities, they said.

    The talks are the first since conflict erupted two weeks ago between forces loyal to President Salva Kiir and his sacked deputy, Riek Machar.

    At least 1,000 people have died and more than 121,600 are believed to have fled their homes.

    East African leaders have been leading mediation efforts to end the crisis.

    On Monday, Uganda’s President Yoweri Museveni threatened the rebels with military action if they failed to agree to a ceasefire by the end of Tuesday, and begin talks.

    Representatives of Mr Kiir and Mr Machar would meet in the Ethiopian capital, Addis Ababa, to defuse tensions in South Sudan, the Ethiopian government said in a statement.

    “The two sides are expected to reach an agreement on the cessation of hostilities and peaceful resolution of the current political crisis,” the statement added.

    Earlier, Mr Machar told the BBC he would send a delegation to the talks, claiming his forces had captured the key town of Bor.

    But while he had agreed to negotiate, he said he would not order his troops to stop fighting.

    He had previously demanded 11 detainees accused of being co-conspirators in a coup plan be freed before negotiations.

    Mr Machar, who was deputy president until he was sacked in July, denies there was a plot – alleged by Mr Kiir.

    The fighting initially broke out in South Sudan’s capital, Juba, and has now spread to many parts of the country.

    The situation in Bor is fast-moving, but a government minister confirmed that the town had fallen to Mr Machar’s forces, reports the the BBC’s James Copnall from Juba.

     

     

     

    South Sudan President Salva Kiir told James Copnall a peaceful solution was still possible

    A UN spokesman said Bor, the capital of Jonglei state, had come under attack at day break, not far from the town’s UN compound.

    Mr Machar said his delegation to talks would be headed by Rebecca Nyandeng, the widow of John Garang, who led South Sudanese rebel forces against Khartoum for many years.

    Our reporter says as a Dinka she may help Mr Machar challenge the allegation that his rebellion is primarily from his Nuer ethnic group.

    Mr Machar’s forces are a mix of mutinous soldiers loyal to him and an ethnic militia called the “white army”, known for putting white ash onto their bodies as a kind of war-paint.

    Observers say the talks are likely to be complicated, as the two sides will have to agree on a mechanism to monitor a ceasefire.

    Mr Kiir has also ruled out any power-sharing arrangement with Mr Machar in the longer term.

    South Sudan is the world’s newest state. It was formed in 2011, gaining independence from Sudan after decades of conflict.