Kenya: creating African dynasties 0
The political culture of dynasties is very much alive in Africa even where there are no kingdoms. In Uganda the opposition has claimed that President Yoweri Museveni is grooming his eldest son Lieutenant Colonel Kaneirugaba Muhoozi, 36, to succeed him.
Museveni has already placed his presidential guard under the Special Forces, an elite army unit commanded by Colonel Muhoozi.
The Special Forces is tasked with, among other duties, guarding the Lake Albert oil fields. In its ranks include commando, infantry, artillery and air force units.
“Already there has been an outcry from Ugandans about the president’s habit of putting his relatives in strategic positions,” opposition defense spokesman Hussein Kyanjo told Newswatch magazine.
“What President Museveni has done confirms Ugandans’ worst fears. He is making the Ugandan presidency monarchical and is clearly anointing his son to succeed him”.
But Army spokesman Lieutenant Colonel Felix Kulayigye has defended Muhoozi by saying:
“He has equal right like you and I and he didn’t chose to be born to a person who was later to become president of Uganda. He’s an individual Ugandan with rights, including contesting for the presidency if he wants”.
After the Presidential Brigade Guard was placed under his charge, the UK and US trained Lt Col Muhoozi is now said to have the sweeping powers of any commander-in-chief.
However this elevation did not come as a surprise since in recent years the Ugandan head of state seems to have developed a penchant for appointing his kinsmen to high office.
The president’s stepbrother General Caleb Akandwanaho (Salim Saleh) is the senior presidential advisor on defense, brother-in-law Sam Kutesa is the foreign affairs minister, daughter Natasha Karugire is the private secretary to the president and the first lady’s nephew Justus Karuhanga is the president’s private secretary for legal affairs.
First Lady Janet Museveni is the minister for Karamoja region while her relative Hope Nyakairu is the finance under-secretary at Ugandan State House.
But President Museveni is not alone in the game. Although Swaziland, Lesotho and Morocco are the only de facto monarchies in Africa, the culture of dynastic political succession is breeding a class of “republican kingdoms”.
“Rulers prefer sons over alternative figures more inclined to hasten the succession through assassination or coup attempts.
Concern about assassination by son is less in a hereditary successional arrangement than if the designated successor is a high ranking official of the existing regime,” writes Jason Brownlee, a political scientist.
Hereditary succession is common in autocratic regimes whose long-serving rulers have cultivated strong personality cults by eliminating rivals and hoarding power around themselves and a clique of elites.
With no institutionalised power structures outside the leader, the state security machinery is used to whip the masses into accepting the preferred successor.
Africa has seen four sons of former heads of states ascend to power in the past 10 years, three of them inheriting leadership directly from their fathers.
Ali Bongo of Gabon and Faure Gnassingbe of Togo succeeded their long serving fathers in bloody and hugely discredited elections.
In DRC, Joseph Kabila was appointed at the tender age of 28 by the military to replace his father who was assassinated in 2001.
In Botswana President Ian Seretse Khama, son of the country’s founding father, came to power after the former head of state abdicated before the end of his term.
The street protests that toppled Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak are said to have been triggered by, among other things, the prospect of his three-decade rule being extended through his son Gamal.
By Mwaura Samara - Continue Reading on Daily Nation















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