6421994bdc7f52740e0d46970bbab342 Chogm Five: Journalists from Here and There
The foreign press swooped in on Kampala last week, complete with fancy cameras and nice computers. They got the inside scoops, better access, and their better equipment seemed to make the difference between the local journos and those just there for the party.

The journalists were all camped out at the new Imperial Royale hotel, sprung up in the middle of town, and incomplete at the time of Chogm. The swimming pool, directly above the media center, leaked onto us as we desperately tried to file and finish our work.

The disparity was more than apparent. Someone told me my camera was small; I said it did the trick. But at the end of the day, how many Ugandans needed to know about Chogm? Sure, the meeting was hosted in their own country, but most were unaffected by the proceedings and unaware of the agenda.

Not that the outside world seemed to care much more. Chogm came and went without much attention or interest, but the Ugandan journalists are still in Uganda with their small cameras and old laptops, and the foreign press corp has moved on to the next story.

Journalists are assholes. Here’s why.

Said one journalist to another:

“The first time I met the Pope I was hungover. The last time I met the Pope I was hungover.”

And then, several minutes later, said same journalist to same other journalist: “When was the last time you saw my wife? No offense, but she saw a picture of you and said you look old.”

But it’s these guys’ job to follow around the Prime Minister of Canada. I asked them, “So, is following around the PM fun?” And without any hesitation, they all answered in unison, “NO.”

Said one journalist to me:

“Your photos are okay. You get an A for effort. But what you really got going for you is that you look vulnerable. No one suspects you of cutting in front of them at a riot to get the photo.”

Why I’m an asshole:

I’ll cut in front of someone at a riot to get the photo.

14f0d077ec5f115fe975c7f50cd8ab21 Chomg Post Three: Broken Sidewalks

They tore up the sidewalks and streets for Chogm to rebuild nicer ones. But since the repairs haven’t been finished, and the Queen and other diplomats and visitors have come and gone, they’ll stay half-finished forever. Chogm came and went without the world’s notice or most Ugandan’s participation. Most Ugandans didn’t see the Queen, air their grievances, or even learn to untangle the acronym.

But they will have to live with Chogm’s destruction indefinitely. Government spent money they didn’t have, and money earmarked for better things, on Chogm. The conference came and went without the sidewalks being repaired, and government certainly won’t have the funds or wherewithal to fix them after Chogm. Such projects are undertaken only with catalysts like Western visitors with Western wallets. Having broke the bank hoping those Western wallets would spill open, fixing sidewalks for her own people won’t be among broke Uganda’s priorities.

After all the visitors have left with the dollars firmly lodged in the pockets, Ugandans will remain, but without decent sidewalks.

Why did Uganda bother with such a conference? The answers are many, but none is as convincing as a news item buried on page 8 of Saturday Monitor, “Britain Gives Uganda Shillings 2 trillion to fight poverty.” The details of the deal were scant, as were the implications. But basically, the British have committed ₤70 million every year over the next ten years.

But how many Ugandans will see these pounds? They are supposed to help with poverty alleviation, but this wasn’t even on the agenda at Chogm. It seems like a side deal brokered by dignitaries who have more to gain than the Ugandans who probably missed the news item, buried on page 8.

d157c2d8fa9854686ebd0324e6fd4153 Chomg Post Three: Broken Sidewalks

While Ugandans were prohibited from coming to town, dignitaries commented that the streets seemed empty. Royals visited carefully screened and selected locations to show off Uganda’s “progress” and “need,” places that embraced both qualities at once.

Queen Elizabeth went to Kitante Primary School, for example, a school much better off than any in districts of Kampala outside of the city center or upcountry, but still one that would seem lacking to her British First-World Eyes. She saw children in old-ish uniforms, classrooms without adequate supplies. But little did she know that there are too many schools where the classrooms are overfilled, the uniforms more threadbare. Or worse, entire districts where kids don’t go to school because even with Universal Primary Education, school fees are still too expensive for indigent parents.

The carefully calculated media fiasco showed her exactly what she wanted to see: a Uganda that has improved, but is still in need.

f8598d05cfbc494aa3b34ccacd2ff312 Chomg Post Three: Broken Sidewalks

But long after she’s gone, the children of Kitante and elsewhere will probably see none of the trillions of shillings to be pocketed by government officials.

And Ugandans will still be walking on broken sidewalks.



Here, and elsewhere if you google…

8f2bd715 aed6 419f a972 64aead020e7b Associated Press: Police Beat Protesters (Chogm Post 2)Ugandan police beat opposition party supporters during a protest rally Friday, Nov. 23, 2007, in Kampala, Uganda, Three people were seriously injured when police and Ugandan opposition supporters clashed on Friday during a demonstration against the Commonwealth meeting taking place in Uganda, said an Ugandan opposition lawmaker. (AP Photo/Glenna Gordon)

c49edc47a037a9f002360e8303a3803c Chogm Post (One of Many)

10692db7647259d2e5c112795cb73fa1 Being a Virgin Makes You Special
A sign from Kitante Primary School, where the Queen of England is expected to visit this weekend for Chogm.

An article by my good friend Frank about the SPCs currently running amok in Kampala….

FRANK NYAKAIRU

Daily Monitor

The 1,000-plus men and women wearing the monogrammed uniform and totting Kalashnikov assault rifles on Kampala’s streets received inadequate training. They may not only be ill-equipped to protect human rights, but may also commit human rights abuses

Against a backdrop of public anxiety, and anger in some instances, about the latest addition to the security forces, it has emerged that key observations about how the Special Police Constables (SPCs) should have been deployed were apparently not adopted.

A specific observation from their trainers recommending that they should not be given guns particularly stands out. An investigation by Sunday Monitor has also found that the 1,000-plus men and women wearing the monogrammed SPC uniform and totting Kalashnikov assault rifles on Kampala’s streets received inadequate training and have gone without pay for the last four months.

The SPCs are already responsible for two deaths and a couple of unwarranted shootings. SPC Jacob Walusimbi, attached to Old Kampala Police Station, on November 10 reportedly shot two people (one an 11-year-old girl who died) when he was deployed to intervene in a land row.

In September, a traders’ row attracted the attention of SPCs in Nansana. When things got out of hand, one constable opened fire and killed one person. Another shooting incident occurred in front of the eastern gate of Kampala Serena Hotel as SPCs battled with boda boda cyclists.

Critics say these and other unreported cases of excessive use of force and/or undue mistreatment of members of the public have cast a shadow on the force, whose deployment was part of the police’s efforts to intensify security for the Commonwealth Heads of Government summit that opens this week where 53 heads of government are expected to attend the three-day summit in Kampala between November 23 and 25.

Sunday Monitor has now learnt that the SPCs who were in training for just six weeks were not ready to be unleashed on the community. Their trainers at the Police Training School (PTS) in Masindi made this observation. Standard police training stretches over nine months.

In his speech at the passing-out of the SPCs on September 15, the Masindi school commandant, Mr Andrew Felix Kaweesi raised what he said were serious concerns about the force’s readiness.

“As trainers we have observed with serious concern the following out of the course; SPCs unless in special circumstances should not be deployed with automatic rifles, instead they should be given batons,” Mr Kaweesi said in the written speech, a copy of which Sunday Monitor has seen.

He noted that SPCs around the country “need to be re-trained, unit commanders and supervisors equally need refresher training in areas of supervision and command.” Mr Kaweesi said this would “help in solving professional mistakes committed by SPCs and the regular police personnel in general.”

But as is clearly obvious, out of every four SPC personnel on foot patrol around Kampala, usually two are armed with Russian made automatic rifles, while the other two hold batons.”
Sunday Monitor has also obtained a copy of letter written by Human Rights Watch (HRW) to the Inspector General of Police, Maj. Gen. Kale Kayihura, dated May 2 warning that SPCs, at least those who were deployed in northern Uganda, were involved in rights abuses possibly because they are ill-trained.

“SPCs not only may be ill-equipped to protect human rights, but may also commit human rights abuses. Like SPCs, LDU soldiers are locally recruited and receive limited training. Some of the newly recruited SPCs are themselves former LDUs. LDUs have proven ineffective at times at providing civilian protection from LRA (Lord’s Resistance Army) rebels, and, meanwhile, numerous observers have reported human rights abuses committed by LDU soldiers,” HRW said in the letter to Gen. Kayihura.

HRW noted that this misconduct including “police demands for money from crime victims in exchange for their services” will undermine the police force’s efforts to enhance their presence in northern Uganda.

The international human rights watchdog said its concerns were based on the findings of research carried out between January and February in 12 internally displaced persons camps.
The organisation said in its letter that “some police officials interviewed by HRW acknowledged that this basic training [of about one and a half months was] inadequate to equip these individuals to carry out police work.”

“HRW is also concerned that inadequately trained SPCs may be more likely to commit human rights buses,” the letter said.Sunday Monitor was not able to get a comment from Maj. Gen. Kayihura for two days, however, force publicist Asan Kasingye denied that they ignored the Masindi trainers’ observations.

“Those recommendations did not apply to the 1,073 SPCs deployed in Kampala they only applied to SPCs around the country,” Kasingye said in an interview with Sunday Monitor. He dismissed public fears that the SPCs are generally ill-trained and trigger happy.

“The two incidents are isolated cases of indiscipline. For instance, the two officers who forced that SPC to work 24 hours and ended up shooting people were arrested,” he said. “We have 6,000 SPC’s countrywide, if they were trigger happy, we would be having 6,000 bodies on the streets,” he added. But even then, the presence of the SPCs has been met with scepticism.

“After Black Mamba, and the Kiboko Squad we are wondering whether these are not their cousin force because no one knows them, no one knows where they came from but they have guns and are on the streets,” said Mr Herbert Arinaitwe, a security and community policing expert told Sunday Monitor.

A member of the public, who preferred not to be named, said of the SPC’s on Kampala’s streets as being “tough-looking gun-totting men early in the morning and weary, lazy and hungry-looking by evening.” This kind impression again highlights the issue of money; are the SPCs paid at all? Do they look hungry and weary because they cannot afford to buy lunch? And above all, it touches on the personal traits of the constables in respect of their background and previous occupation.

news11183 ‘SPCs should not be armed’
THREAT TO THE COMMUNITY: SPCs have caused concern because they misuse their guns

Mr Arinaitwe had said the police engaged in “hand picking the SPC which is wrong in a multi-party dispensation like this.” But Mr Kasingye defended the recruitment method saying “these are people seconded by Local Councils to police stations and we ensure that they have a clean crime record before that are taken for training,”
The credibility of that assertion is, however, tested against Mr Kaweesi’s warning during the September 15 pass-out.

Mr Kaweesi warned; “Recruitment of SPCs needs to be carefully done and should have clear professional criteria to avoid recruiting wrong elements.” Was he saying something through this statement?

Considering the public outcry, especially in Kampala, Mr Kasingye’s position will come under particular scrutiny. This the more so since the SPCs received what amounts to a crash course (six weeks in training) in which they covered basic military skills, counter terrorism
, VIP protection, police duties and procedure, human rights, skills at arms, political education and Chogm policing standards.

Mr Arinaitwe insisted that the SPCs could not have adequately covered these crucial subjects in depth in just six weeks. “That is impossible” Mr Arinaitwe said.

“Basic military skills alone will take more than six weeks and how would these people master which bomb types and how to detonate them in such a short time?

“These people were rushed through and that is very dangerous,” he added. With less than a week to go for the long awaited Chogm, the issue of SPCs has now attracted government attention. Internal Affairs minister, Dr Ruhakana Rugunda, said his ministry might review the entire strategy.

“We are investigating these cases. If we find that they are part of a bigger problem, we might have to review the whole policy,” Dr Rugunda said in an interview on Friday.

Similar concern is also emerging in Parliament with Maj. Jessica Alupo, who sits on the House’s defence and internal affairs committee, telling Sunday Monitor on Friday that: “We are going to ask the chairman of the Chogm security committee (Maj. Gen. Kayihura) to explain these incidents to us. We also want to know why these SPCs have not been paid because a hungry man with a gun is a very dangerous one.”

The Foundation for Human Rights Initiative (FHRI) on the other hand puts it down to what it says is the anti-people mentality of security services in Uganda.

“There is a multiplicity of agencies – the so-called squads. In the eyes of the public, the SPCs are just one of them. Our forces are yet to appreciate the value of life; they continue to deploy unnecessary and excessive force,” said FHRI boss Livingstone Ssewanyana.

Whatever the case, it is clear that the SPC security strategy is one that has been received with mixed impressions: on the one hand petty crime appears to have receded, and yet there are murmurings of high-handedness.

Additional reporting by Andrew Bagala.

7094c0b28ceee7a6f1cd080ec1c58faa I shake Museveni's hand and say nothing intelligent

First I follow him around at the Commonwealth People’s Forum, taking lots of pictures. When he’s leaving, the journalistic entourage, which on this occasion consists of a lot of Ugandan men, a random Chinese guy, and me, follow him to his President-mobilie.

25298c07e2145d8502a51d48da10482b I shake Museveni's hand and say nothing intelligent

Then he holds out his hand, and I’m busy thinking, great photo op! But the reporter from Monitor next to me nudges me and says, he wants to shake your hand. Ahh, I see….

70b94cc90f57fe3e0bffa6e5dd540c78 I shake Museveni's hand and say nothing intelligent

Thanks for sending me the photo, Joseph.


I guess due to the visibility of this blog, I get a lot of emails from people I don’t know. Some are basic inquires on “what to bring with me when I come to Uganda and will I get malaria?” and some are more interesting…. a few here….

Number One:
From a man in Florida
(I’m just imagining the kind of hate mail I would get for executing this article)

I stumbled across your blog and thought you might be interested in this. I married a Ugandan woman – White man/Black woman – from Kampala that I met on the net. She didn’t rip me off for some huge sum of money – but she was and is extremely deceitful (IMO). So … after 4 trips to the States and 2 trips for me to Kampala all on my expense – I’ve filed for divorce. It’s probably not that unusual but could be an article. This woman used to be part of a semi-famous group called the Obsessions.

Please let me know your thoughts. If you’re not interested, who might you suggest I contact? Daily Monitor, New Vision, Weekly Observer or some other East African (or USA) publication? I have bunches of photos and letters. Thanks!

Number Two:
From DRC, a man who has actually now emailed me about five times and spent enough airtime to call from Congo to Uganda. (David wrote a go away reply, which I won’t quote here for reasons of profanity.)

Dear wife to be,
Glenna Gordon,
It is in the name of jesus Christ, I am writing to you this message in order to let you know about my proposam wish just to you.
While our communication with my Partner Donor Father Robby Gordon, has told me about you when I would like to know about his family condition.
Suddenly, I have very interested with your issues, unfortunately the credit which was into my Mobile ended without submitted my proposal wish just about you to him, by asking your full contacts, thus I made through E-mail message.
today of 7th Nov, 2007 is wonderful day for me to get your contacts from father partner Donor Robby Gordon, directly has made easy evry tning so that we may further with our process alone for an agreement.
My proposal wish is to get married as is my proposition to get married with one of my Partners:
1. As thanksgiving for whatever they have been doing for me,
2. Build strong ralationship,
3. To stick together for ever…
And as you know we are going to stay together even with my Father Partner Donor Gordon in Mboko City IV, Tanganika Ward, Fizi Zone, in South Kivu DRC, just at the Organisation’s Mission and its projects compound.
It was happyness to get some of your news from the web site which I have been gotten from Father Partner Donor Gordon.
These are my hobbies:
- Going to church
- Community Services (Development),
- Reading
- Watching TV(good news),
- To visit and being visited…
Are not my favorites:
- Swimming
- Acting inderect
- Lies
- Delay,
DURATION OF PROCESS: Is from now after each other agreement. No time to waste for nothing.
At last I can need more of your issues, like photo, proposals,…
Looking forwards to hearing from you soonest.
Love.
Yours in marriage

From Okello Lucima, who also has a blog, Northern Uganda Messenger Post

Ms. Gordon, that was a good article. The questions you ask are pertinent. Many of us have questioned the deliberate dichotomy between peace and justice. But it seems that the proponents of peace first and justice later or none at all, are well connected with powerful political and diplomatic backers who drown out the other voices.
I am an Acholi and have been involved with the advocacy for a negotiated settlement with a just peace for a long time. We believe Mato Oput is nonsensical and mere cloak for impunity. The ICC has its shortcomings in not carrying out investigations of all alleged war crimes and crimes against humanity, and not letting the evidence lead it to those culpable, irrespective of which side they belong to. As a result, their investigation seems partial and politically directed by some vested interests.
Nonetheless, many of us believe that international justice, based on international humanitarian and human rights jurisprudence, and the practices of special tribunals, is the best conflict termination model that can ensure a just settlement and a just peace for northern Uganda. Anything short of that, will provide only but a temporary peace. Another section of northerners and ugandan nationalist will someday bring to account the war criminals in the northern Uganda war theatre.
Both state and non-state parties must account for their actions in this war.
From Janet Nyorozi,
Thank you for your article today in the Monitor, the article raised view points many of which i partly agree with and i commend you for stating your case so boldly. Tha one point that i find very uneasy to swallow or buy is that the camps in northern Uganda are a creation of the LRA. Please do your research more carefully.
It puzzles me why the Bazungus always think that only they know the gospel truth, even if though it is their first time in the region. They are not bothered with the history of the war. Then what is the meaning of peace for these poor northerners.
My mother came from Luwero, and believe me if the truth about Luwero was in the open the people of Luwero would have been at peace, and i promise you they will never have peace until the truth about Luwero is out.
So please elaborate more on your point. Spare me the people ran to the army for protection and all that lah di lah crap.
My response:

I quote you: “Tha one point that i find very uneasy to swallow or buy is that the camps in northern Uganda are a creation of the LRA. Please do your research more carefully.”

However, at no point in my article do I ever say the camps are a creation of the LRA. In fact, I don’t mention at all how or why the camps were created. I simply write about the ceremony I witnessed and my impressions.

If you would like to show me a specific portion of my article you take issue with, I will happily respond. However, I do not personally appreciate unfounded accusations of ill-researched work, since I always put time and thought into my work. Again, if you have a specific point, I will respond to it, but I never write that the camps are the creation of the LRA. I might argue that the camps are a result of the LRA activities, but I know the difference between “result of” and “creation by.”

I quote you again: “t puzzles me why the Bazungus always think that only they know the gospel truth, even if though it is their first time in the region.”

I, for one, never ever claim to know the gospel truth, and always insist that what I’m writing is a truth I’ve found, not one universal or gospel, as you say. As for the first time in the region, I’ve been living in Africa for almost two years, and while this doesn’t compare to someone who has spent their life here, it is in fact different than a tourist or aid worker who drops in and out for a week or two. I’ve been here long, and I plan on staying longer. I hope my knowledge will only grow and I will be able to understand more truths.

I am sorry for any hardship your mother endured simply by mischance of living in an area filled with insurgency and hope that whatever kind of peace she desires is the peace that is found.

From Joyce Acen,

What perturbs me is the apparent open bias against the LRA delegation and the IDP residents opinions and choices presented in your reporting. It seems you obviously did not like what you saw and heard, and would apparently rather the IDP residents raised their hands in compliance with your own personal views and opinions about their situation, which your argument seemed to suggest must be somehow more educated and superior.

There are therefore many questions I would like to ask you.
First of all, how long have you been in the area and how well do you know the people and culture? Is that knowledge or understanding sufficient to enable you to outrightly disregard their outwardly expressed views?

Suppose you really did have adequate knowledge and understanding, why didn’t you take the opportunity to interview some of those 300 residents at the event, or even other camp residents to establish their “true” opinion or any evidence of coercion, or perhaps their rationale for such a seemingly logic-defying position?

I have been made to understand from previous news coverage that the LRA negotiation team have visited scores of other locations, including other camps over northern Uganda. Could you please identify the geographic locations and distances from urban areas of each and every place visited by the delegation to justify your criticism of their choice of Koch Goma over other camps? Or perhaps justify any real reasons why Koch Goma camp is not representative of IDP populations, perhaps some underlying demographic bias arising from the areas those displaced people originate from?

Why didn’t you similarly interview people to actually establish the truth about Martin Ojul’s claim that the Koch Goma camp sits right on the location his ancestral family home? Did you try to establish how many members of his extended family have been directly or indirectly affected? Did you actually establish whether he has ever belonged to the LRA ranks, or if he merely offered himself to negotiate on the LRA leaders’ behalf simply to expedite the peace process since the real LRA leaders would not appear for face to face talks for fear of arrests?

My honest suggestion to you is “listen” and “observe” more; get rid of your apparent “attitude” and your pessimism for our sake. I know you have every personal right to be skeptical and hold whatever opinions you want. But 21 years and still counting, waiting in vain for our nation, “the world”. or mere intellectual ranting to help, please give us a chance to use the options we have got, and to reason and do things the only way we know how. Allow us the right hope and have our hopes dashed; to fail and perhaps try again. This is all I ask. We have not closed our ears and will listen to suggestions offered with understanding and respect, and they will be treated with due respect. To all our compassionate supporters, providers, and sympathizers who have stood by us and ensured the survival of a remnant of our people against all odds I say, raise your hands if you really want to stand with northern Ugandans.

Just to clarify, I was born and raised in Acholi in northern Uganda and do not personally know any of the LRA or their delegates but my family, like the majority of northern Ugandan families have suffered violence, displacement, loss of life and much much more in the last 21 years.

From a northern Ugandan woman, raised in Koch. kquote>

My reply:

Thank you for your mail.

I do not think my views are more “educated or superior” as you seem to claim, only that I question small children raising their hands as a sign of support for forgiveness. I am only expressing my opinion, not one I claim is superior.

You ask: “First of all, how long have you been in the area and how well do you know the people and culture? Is that knowledge or understanding sufficient to enable you to outrightly disregard their outwardly expressed views?”

I have been in Uganda for over a year and in East Africa for even longer. Do I think this makes me an expert on Acholi culture? In no way shape or form, nor have I ever claimed to be one. Again, I am questioning what I have seen and the meaning behind it, without claiming any kind of expertise. I was there, I saw, I reported. That’s all.

Next, you ask why I didn’t interview more camp residents. First off, I did interview camp residents for a different piece that I wrote, but the piece to which you are referring was about impressions of the event, as commissioned by my editor for that specific purpose.

You also ask about my criticism of location – for which I will refer you to my article. As for other places the delegates have visited, I am aware of their travel agenda but not the details. If you would like to find out where they are going, I can put you in contact with the appropriate people.

Finally, you say, “My honest suggestion to you is “listen” and “observe” more; get rid of your apparent “attitude” and your pessimism for our sake.” My job is to listen and observe, and the piece I wrote is based on observations (which seems to be one of your complaints), so please think about what you are suggesting to me. As for my “attitude”, I am a person with opinions and a voice, and I don’t intend to change that. If it offends you, I apologize for your upset, but not for expressing my voice. As a journalist this is my job, and I will continue to do my job. If no one questions what is happening, then all will be excepted without thinking or understanding – not something anyone wants. I hope there is room for multiple opinions in our world and I will continue to express mine.

I am very sorry for all the losses that you and your family have suffered. I only hope that the peace you desire will come to you and all those you care about.