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Uganda's Struggle to Break With the Past
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12515 |
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Section : |
CURRENT ISSUES
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7 / 1987 |
2,814 Words |
| Author
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Oliver W. Furley Oliver Furley, an East African specialist and former senior
lecturer at Makerere University, is currently professor of
politics and history at Coventry Polytechnic in Great Britain. |
Until the British established a protectorate, Uganda was not one country but many: The area consisted of four kingdoms and a number of ethnic groups organized along differing segmentary lines. The centralized kingdoms were in the South, and the people in the south generally belonged to the Bantu-speaking groups, who had little linguistic, ethnic, or cultural affinity with the taller, darker Nilotic groups in the North. Much has been written about this North-South divide in Uganda. It is sometimes exaggerated, but it is always there, and it still poses perhaps the greatest problem for Yoweri Museveni's government today.
The British compounded the difficulties by favoring the kingdoms, and according them special self-governing privileges, in the system of "indirect rule." The central kingdom of Buganda, especially, had a formal agreement with the British granting them semiautonomy and a special status within the protectorate. They remained a state within a state, headed by their Kabaka (king), and at the time of independence would have preferred to break off and form their own nation-state, sloughing off the poorer, less developed areas of Uganda.
This strong political separatism of the Buganda people has always presented a major obstacle to the postindependence governments of Uganda in building up a spirit of national unity. Museveni can approach it in a different way, because for the first time the government is predominantly "southern" in its personnel and its support, but whether Buganda aspiration can be contained within it remains to be seen. Already there have been pleas to restore the Kabakaship and put Prince Ronald Mutebi on the throne. Museveni has allowed him back in the country but has firmly forbidden talk of a
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