THE LAST WORD | ANDREW M. MWENDA | On Sunday March 20th, speaker of parliament, Jacob Oulanyah, succumbed to a terminal illness in a hospital in Seattle – three days shy of his 57th birthday. He had been fighting for his life for over nine months. Outside, a crowd of wannabe Ugandans in America were demonstrating against his hospitalization abroad, insisting that government was wasting money to save his life. What has become of us? Many Ugandans believe such advanced and specialized medical services should be available in the country and should be provided for free to all citizens by the government. This is a level of thoughtlessness that is difficult to fathom.
It is sad that Oulanyah died before he had served any
substantial amount of time as speaker. This has robbed us of an opportunity to
experience his leadership at the top. We had a good idea of his ability and
style since he had been deputy speaker for the previous ten years. Nonetheless,
a deputy is a deputy and we needed to see Oulanyah with full powers. I am sure
he was going to leave an enduring legacy on the speakership. Oulanyah possessed
the right qualities for the job – a rare combination of toughness when
necessary, and a soft reconciliatory touch.
Uganda’s parliamentarians can be rowdy, as they
demonstrated during the constitutional amendment to remove age limits. Oulanyah
knew how to use the rules, his strength of character and maturity of judgment
to avoid such situations. This is why he was a darling of many MPs – he could
be tough on them and yet retain their friendship and loyalty. He did this
because he never took things personally. In his private space, he could easily
lose his cool, but never in the performance of his official duties as speaker.
I knew Oulanyah very well, having met him when I was a
student at Makerere University, him an intellectual on the Uganda political
scene. This was in the mid 1990s during the constitution making process. We
immediately struck a friendship. An agricultural economist who later studied
law and became one of the best lawyers in town, Oulanyah was an all-rounder. He
was a man with a big heart – open, generous, affable and always ready to
engage.
In the late 1990s and early 2000s, I was a regular
visit to his home in Muyenga-Kasanga, where I would meet his late wife Dorothy
and their kids. Dorothy and Oulanyah were more than wife and husband. They were
buddies as well. Around the house he took care of kids of his later sister, a
young sibling and many people who had little means and sought his support. In
my interactions with him, I realized that he was always focused on the future
and a congenital optimist. He always looked back to the past of course, not as
a museum of remembrance but as a source of lessons on how to navigate the
present and pursue the future he sought.
Oulanyah’s political life was a rollercoaster right
from his student days. He was not new to the job of speaker having served as
speaker to the student’s Guild Representative Council at Makerere University in
the late 1980s. It is there that he built his friendship with the indefatigable
Nobert Mao, president of DP, who was Guild President. During a strike over
“cost sharing” where he was one of the leaders at the university in 1989, two
students were shot dead, Oulanyah was injured. It was his initiation into
national politics and propelled him to what became a life-long career.
The former speaker’s political journey is a powerful
story of triumph against the odds. It is also a story of Uganda’s politics of
conflict and reconciliation. He came from Acholi although his father (now 92
years young) is Langi. The region was characterized by a long running and
brutal insurgency for the first 20 years of President Yoweri Museveni’s
administration. Oulanyah, his family and people were victims of this
insurgency, caught between an exceptionally brutal rebel group, the LRA, and
government troops that were often violent and inconsiderate. It pained him. Yet
in spite of this, he never lost his optimism or sense of perspective and never
allowed his personal and community suffering to embitter his soul.
He was both a man of principle and a pragmatist even
though the two seem an oxymoron. He knew too well the thin lines between
principle and pragmatism: that when principle is taken too far, it becomes
dogmatism and rigidity while unchecked pragmatism tends to opportunism. So, he
always sought to strike a creative balance between these contradictions – not
to pursue a principle in a rigid manner as to defeat its purpose but also not
to be too pragmatic as to sell his soul. It is a remains a singular triumph of
his political career that he navigated this terrain with exceptional skill.
For instance, in the mid to late 1990s, Oulanyah used
to tell me, and often even say it in public fora, that he was born UPC and will
die UPC because that party’s plasma ran inside his blood. Yet when the right
moment came, he quit UPC and joined the NRM, a political party he had long
opposed. It is a mark of his political acumen and Museveni’s (and NRM’s)
accommodating and reconciliatory approach to politics that this happened.
I know how this came about. Before he crossed to NRM,
he sought my advice. I told Oulanyah that I saw little ideological and
personnel differences between NRM and UPC. NRM was a child of UPC – most of its
leaders having been UPC youths-wingers who disagreed with its founding
president, Milton Obote, rather than the party’s ideological inclinations and
policy preferences. In the policy sphere, NRM had come to power articulating
UPC’s 1969 leftish policy ideas, and just like UPC in the early 1980s, had
embraced free market policies. The two parties were therefore similar. I
encouraged him to join NRM, even predicting that his career in NRM will go
beyond anything UPC could ever offer him.
In 2004, he was what used to be called opposition MPs
although there was no such thing in the constitution of the time. He had
chaired the parliamentary legal committee that was tasked to handle the
sensitive issue of removal of term limits. Everyone expected Oulanyah to use
his position to create a stalemate. But he was politically smart enough to
recognize that democracy is a game of numbers, and the NRM had these. Using his
position to suppress the move would be tantamount to abuse of office. He
managed the process with such political and leadership skill that the committee
approved the amendments without causing the kind of fist fights that
characterized the removal of age limits.
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amwenda@independent.co.ug
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